THE SPIRIT'S Touchstone: OR, The Teachings of Christ's Spirit on the hearts of BELIEVERS. Being a clear discovery, how a man may certainly know whether he be really taught of the Spirit of God, Being very useful for these times. 1 Cor. 2.15. But he that is spiritual judgeth all things, yet he himself is judged of no man. By J. R. late Student of Morton College in Oxford. London, Printed for Simon Miller at the Star in St. Paul's Church yard. 1657. Sept. 10. 1656. Imprimatur Edm. Calamy. TO THE WORSHIPFUL Dr. LANGLEY, Master of Pembrook-College in Oxford, and one of the Canons of Christ-Church. Reverend Sir, Under God, and next to my Parents, I may righty term you the dearest friend that I have in the World; from whom when I was at Oxford a Student in Merton-College, I received many favours, and great encouragements to the promoting of my studies, being by your care and vigilance over me preferred from Pembrook-College, over which yourself is a worthy Master, thither to a Scholar's place in the house. And since I left Oxford, I have been continually in your thoughts, when God shall open a way for my further preferment. Upon this account, with many other obliging arguments, I have presumed in this present Treatise, a● the first fruits of a more plentiful harvest, to address myself unto you by way of thankfulness, to whom I own myself, and the praise and the glory, as to a secondary cause, of all those services which God shall ever enable me to do for his Church and people. My portion to dispense the Word of God is fallen out in a very disheartening and in an evil time: yet let the opposition of the world, of flesh, and of the devil; let the carnal reasonings of flesh and blood, let the malice of unreasonable men be never so great, I have determined with myself to be the servant of Jesus Christ, and of his Church, so long as my life, health, strength, liberty, or any ability by the good providence of God is preserved unto me; and to spend it, and to be spent for the Gospel of my Saviour. If I meet with opposition, as I must do, I have nothing but what I looked for, and what is my lot and portion while I am in this life, and what all the faithful servants of Jesus Christ have formerly undergon, and what the enmity in the spirit of the world against the Spirit of God doth naturally produce; and what we must have if we be faithful and conscientious in our places, not daubing with untempered mortar, but speaking the truth in the heart; and what follows as necessarily wheresoever the power of godliness, the cross of Christ, the lesson of self denial, and the setting ourselves against the corruptions of the times, and the breaking down of the Magazines of sin, and the setting up the pure worship of God, and a plain, sincere, honest hearted dealing for the good of their souls, not sparing any, high or low, rich or poor, honourable or despised, so he it God may be glorified, and the Kingdom of Christ advanced, is fully held forth. An evil time I say it is, wherein, under a colour of zeal for the cause of God, as if these were the forerunners of Christ's second coming upon the earth, wherein as they say he shall reign a thousand years, as John the Baptist was the forerunner of his first coming (He indeed was so, for he came to prepare the way of the Lord, & to make his paths strait before his face: But if we grant them forerunners, they are no otherwise then sad omens of the world's destruction, with all the rest of the Antichristian party, when Christ shall come to render vengeance upon them that know him not, and obey not the Gospel of his Son) they pervert the right ways of the Lord, and corrupt the word of God, (before the second coming of Christ there shall be an Apostasy from the faith) when they seek to remove and to put out the light of the glorious Gospel, that they may sinne with more freedom, by turning our Bethel into a Bethaven, and the houses of the Prophets to a den of abominable wretches. Woe be to those men who are disobedient to the heavenly vision, who despise Prophecying, who reject the word of his faithful Ambassadors, calling them Popish fellows, and Priests of Baal, under a pretence of higher mysteries. It will be the saddest time that ever England saw yet, if the Sun shall go down upon the Ministers of the Gospel, and the night shall come upon them. Where the vision fails, the people perish. My people are destroyed for lack of knowledge. Prov. 29.18. Hosea 4.6. 2 Chro. 15 3, 4, 5, 6. When there was no vision, nor no teaching Priest, than there was no peace to him that came in, or to him that went out. David saith, Psal. 11.3. If the foundations be destroyed, what shall the righteous do? And if a faithful Ministry, and a conscientious Magistracy be removed, and men be suffered to do what they list, without reproof and correction, and instruction, what can we expect but abominable profaneness, but that England should become a second Rome, a second Babylon, and another Sodom? But yet I hope better things of England yet, since God hath a precious seed to show forth his praise, growing up in the two famous Universities of this land, watered exceedingly with Divine showers of heavenly grace, & with the influences from above, by the late prudent government in them; seeing by the wise providence of God such pious, conscientious and holy men do sit at the stern and do guide the helm, lest the sons of the Prophets might be infected with the errors and heresies of the times; and the sons of Belial might prevail over them; though yet there is not a sufficient purgation of pride, self seeking and of the advancement of humane wisdom before the everlasting wisdom of God, from the Midst of them. And there is yet something to be done before the blessing of God will descend upon them in such a plentiful measure as otherwise it would, to wit, a joint setting themselves with one shoulder, and with one consent to serve God in sincerity of heart, and to bestir themselves more than ever for the preserving of the truth of God, and to clear the truth from all those calumnies which have been cast upon it in these latter times, and to stand up for the honour of God, and of his Church. Now as there is a generation of men, men of perverse minds, reprobate concerning the faith, given over to a spirit of delusions, blinded with a judicial blindness, and hardened with a judicial hardness, led away with the vanity of their minds, wicked and ungodly men, foreordained to destruction, who would pull down all Ordinances, as preaching, prayer, receiving of the Sacraments, holy conference, and all those means whereby grace is wrought, cherished, promoted, & confirmed in the hearts of believers: and which is far worse, they pretend to do all this by the light of the spirit within them. As Mahomet the vilest of men did pretend that he was inspired by the holy Ghost in the form of a Dove. so these miserable creatures pretend to the teachings of the spirit upon their hearts, that so their heretical and blasphemous Tenants may receive the better entertainment. If they had not fathered their falsehoods, blasphemies, heresies upon the Spirit of God, I had slept in silence, but when they make the Spirit of God to be a lying spirit, a deluding spirit, a profane spirit, by their saying that the Spirit teacheth them to live above Ordinances, to blaspheme, to scoff at the word of his grace, that the Spirit will supply all their wants without the use of means, and that they stand not in need of those beggarly Elements, to wit, the Word, Prayer, Sacraments, and other means of grace, as they call them, and all upon the account of the Spirits teaching: I had no rest in my spirit, till what light was imparted unto me concerning the teaching of the spirit upon the hearts of believers, I had published for the benefit and comfort of true honesthearted Christians; expecting to undergo the censure of some Aristarchus or other, though God who trieth all things knoweth the sincerity of my heart in this matter. I wish the subject of my discourse had had a better workman to have handled it; but what is defective in my endeavours shall be supplied in my preys, that God would pour forth of his Spirit more and more upon the hearts of his people, according to the tenor of the covenant, and that Gospel promise that we shall be all taught of God; and to rectify those horrid abuses which are done to the blessed Spirit, and to shame those impudent creatures who say they are taught of the spirit, while they fulfil the dictates and commands of the flesh and of the Devil, and to destroy the spirit of error & profaneness, the spirit of Antichrist which exalts itself in the lives of many Saints eminent in the eyes of the world, and to preserve his people, his Ambassadors, his Sacraments, his truth, his Word in the power and purity of it; and to keep us from Popery, superstition, will-worships, and from the doctrnes of men; and to make his Church a glorious Church for purity of worship and piety of life, in this thrice blessed Nation, for the means of grace, and for the true knowledge of God which is in it; which is and ever shall be the request of him at the throne of grace, who is, Yours most obliged in all duty add observance, J. R. TO The Ingenuous and Honest-hearted READER. IT is well known to the grief and sorrow, and daily vexation of many righteons Lots, who daily torment themselves for the perverseness of this crooked generation amhngst whom they dwell, that the common plea of most men who pretend to the knowledge of the things of God, is the teachings of the Spirit upon their hearts: Never was the spirit so much cried up in respect of its teachings as it is now adays, Caution. God forbidden that I should sin against the generation of the righteous and offend one of God's little ones by opening my mind in so free a way. I am verily persuaded God hath at peculiar people, a godly party amongst us, most dear and precious unto him, who know what their generation work is; & what it is to serve God in spirit and in truth; a praying people for whose sakes this very sinful Nation laden with sin and with iniquity is still preserved a most glorious Nation: By these therefore whom I so in this Epistle understand those overly righteous people who confining salvation & religion to themselves; as if none were saved but they; set themselves with all their might against those who do not comply with them, and by opposing godly Magistracy & Ministry of this present Nation, seek to extirpate both; so be it their ends and aims may be carried on And I am verily persuaded had done it, had not God procured in his mercy a gracious liberty for us. woe to those who abuse this liberty by venting forth uncouth opinions, strange doctrines horrid blasphemies, these persons the Lord will consume with the breath of his nostrils. and never were men less void of the spirit, and besotted with the delusious of the Devil, and with the fancies of these own pernicious brains than they are now: If self-pride, intolerable covetousness, ambition of honour, contempt of the word and Gospel of Christ, disrespect, slighting, and open scoffing it the Ministers of the Gospel: If a secret covert-acting of profaneness under the cloak of religion, as to lie, to deceive, to cousin, to backbite, to revile, to reproach, to revenge, to hate, to rejoice at the harms of others who are far better than themselves; and to lay wait for their falls, as if it did them a pleasure to see God dishonoured, to persecute, to molest, and the like, and all this under a pretence of doing God service: If want of love to the Saints of God, and to the ways of his worship, a not receiving of the truth in meekness of spirit: if earthly mindedness and a grovelling in this present world, a not obedience to Magistracy and the powers set over us by God: If a slavery to the traditions and inventions of men: If a prejudice o●a heart against whatsoever is not suitable to their corrupted minds: If selfseeking (when they seek their own things and not the things which are of Jesus Christ,) and a refusing whatsoever they cannot apprehend, and the light within them directs them to: If an undervaluing of others, and a preferring of themselves, when every true Christian esteems each other better than himself: If a proud, censorious, critical spirit interpreting and judging of persons and of things, according as their blind reason, and ill affected minds lead them: If inconstancy and levity of mind, ignorance, profaneness and a building upon truths without any ground or foundation: If a boasting, and bragging of an infallible spirit; and of the light of the spirit within them: If a making of sections, parties and factions needlessly and without any cause, only upon the account of singularity; because they love to be Christians by themselves, and to walk upon their own legs, and to stand upon their own bottoms: If a walking contrary to the mind of the spirit, making the spirit the author of confusion in Church and State; when merely upon the account of the spirits teachings, as if these were a sufficient call for a man to be an Ambassador of Jesus Christ; and therefore he must break his bounds; and leave that calling and station God hath set him in; and run upon irreverent things when they are not sent: If superstition, will-worship, sacrilege; neglect of the Sacraments, of Prayer, of the Word; and of building up one another in the most precious faith: If a malicious frame of heart under a sheepish sanctity, for many wolvish professors are now adays in sheep's clothing: If an impudent, contradicting, blaspheming spirit; If a persecuting spirit: If an advancing of their own fictions before the pure and unspotted word of God: If a rash impetuous zeal not moderated with discretion, and the love of the truth, and of the word of God, which is rather madness and folly than zeal: If unbelief, Atheisms, Heresies, and most horrid blasphemies not to be mentioned: If a living above Ordinances, without the use of the Word, Sacraments and Prayer: If a coldness and deadness in affection to the things of God; and a full bend of will to oppose Jesus Christ in his Saints, and in his servants, and a continual persisting therein though they are condemned in their own consciences, and so are like to commit that unpardonable sin against the holy Ghost; from which sin, I hearty beseech God to preserve the Quakers of these times, with many others who sin against the light of their own consciences: If a hating of the power of godliness, and of the pure worship of God: If a want of self-denial, and daily bearing the cross of Christ: If an Apostasy from the faith which was once delivered unto the Saints; If a setting up of false doctrines under the pretence of new discoveries: If we are not fallen into the last times of the world, wherein that place is too much verified, wherein men shall be covetous, lovers of themselves, boasters, proud, blasphemers, 2 Tim. 3.1.2, 3, 4, 5. disobedient to parents, unthankeful, unholy; Without natural affection, truce-breakers, false accusers, incontinent, fierce, despisers of those that are good, Traitor's heady, highminded, lovers of pleasures more than lovers of God; Having a form of Godliness, but denying the power of it. If these things be so, as it is too apparent to the grief of many righteous persons, who weep in secret for the iniquity of the times; then we may as truly say, that Turks, Infidels, and Pagans have the teachings of the spirit upon their hearts; as the most part of our lukewarm, proud, opinionative, and carnally-minded professors have; Such evil principles and wicked practices as are now amongst those that go for Saints cannot agree with the blessed spirit. I am verily persuaded that if once the furnace of affliction should wax hot again; and Christ should come to sift England again by the red fiery flaming sword of persecution; and bring us under the hatchet; and under the hand of Tyrannical persecutors; and should come to purge his floor to distinguish between the precious, and the vile; between him that feareth God, and him that feareth him not; between him that serveth him out of an upright heart, and him that serveth him but under a colour and pretence: I am verily persuaded that the greatest part of profesting Christians now adays, who make such a fair show in the flesh, who seem so beautiful and glorious in the outside; who are so hot at the first onset, and taking up a form of religion, who pretend so much to the work of the spirit upon their hearts; if they were singled out to undergo the fiery trial would fall the foulest in the flesh. No outward privilege or benefit can afford a man any comfort under an afflicted condition but only the sense of the love of God unto us in Jesus Christ by an act of the spirit sealing it to our souls is a certain sign that we shall continue unto the end. For who God loves once, he loves to the end. And those whom God loves, God will preserve unto himself as a peculiar treasure, as precious jewels in his cabinet secretly; and will make their mountains strong, as strong as Mount Zion which shall never be moved, that their faith and confidence shall be in the Lord Jehovah for ever and ever. I beseech thee Christian, for the good of thy soul to separate thyself from these deceiving creatures; let not their hypocrisy, their juggling with the world, and their own consciences though they cannot mock God, their seeming sanctity, their pretended piety, their high notions and deep interpretations far fetch from the simplicity of the truth which neither they themselves, nor others well understand delude thee? while they lay claim to the spirit, they are in the bonds of iniquity: Consider whether they have the spirit before thou closest with their say for truth; that they are taught by the Spirit of Christ, and that the light of the spirit reside within them. Are they regenerated, born again, and renewed by the Spirit of Christ? Do they grow in grace and in the knowledge of Jesus Christ? Have they the witness of God's Spirit concurring with their spirits that they are the children of God? Doth the spirit help their infirmities? Was ever the spirit of prayer and supplicatton poured forth upon them? Have they the preventing grace, the renewing grace, the establishing grace, the comforting grace, the quickening grace, the healing grace, the directive grace of the spirit? Do they love the brethren because they are brethren, and one with thee in Jesus Christ, or because they are of such an opinion? Do they acknowledge the spirit in others; and magnify God's goodness unto their soul? Did the spirit ever rarify the scorching heat of their burning lusts? Did the sanctifying influences of the spirit ever descend upon their hearts? Did the spirit ever soften their hard hearts, Cant. 7.7. fructify their barren souls? The breasts of the spouse are like clusters of grapes. Cant. 4 16 Did the spirit ever blow upon their gardens that the spices thereof may send forth a precious smell in the nostrils of God? Do they bring forth fruits unto holiness, that their end might be everlasting life? Did the spirit ever quench the fire of hell within their consciences by pouring in the sweet oil of consolation made up of the blood of Christ? Did the spirit ever cleanse their consciences from dead works that they may serve the everliving God: Heb. 9.14. Ez. 36.25. The spirit is resembled by water. I will pour clean water upon you, and you shall be clean. It is the nature of water, to mollify, to fructify, to quench, to cleanse and purify: what zeal, what heat, what ardency of spirit, what kindle of affections are there in them towards God, and the ways of his worship? what lights do they hang abroad to others, that others seeing their good works might glorify God? and what progress do they make in Christianity; with what eagerness of spirit as if they were serious for their souls good do they lay hold on eternal life; Nay rather, do they not stand still, as if they had already obtained perfection, when they are on the declining hand. In fire there is heat, brightness and motion. Ex. 13.22. What Dovelike qualifications have they? Doth the spirit of meekness, of love, and of a sound mind reside amongst them; The spirit of peace, of unity, of gentleness, of fear, of sonlike obedience to the commands of God? The Spirit of God came down in the form of a dove upon our blessed Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ. Mat. 3.16. Were they ever truly affected with God's distinguishing love and mercy in that his Spirit should teach them, as they say, and let others lie in darkness? Did the spirit drive away from amongst them the dust and the chaff of their vain and frothy minds? Did the spirit ever enable them to overcome the bent of their natural inclinations? If Socrates by the help of moral instructions was able to bridle his lose disposition: much more may they who are taught by the spirit. Did the spirit ever make, them of unwilling willing to receive Jesus Christ, and to take his yoke upon them? The Spirit is resembled by the wind; which in its blowing is arbitrary, Joh. 3.8. irresistible, full of might and efficacy scattering the dust, and dispolling the clouds. Do their hearts burn within them at the hearing of the things of God, as the two disciples hearts did, with whom Christ had conference after his resurrection? The Spirit of God came down upon the brethren in the form of fiery flaming tongues. It is an easy thing for a man to say he is taught, and enlightened by the Spirit of God; but how few are they that are so indeed? Beloved Christian, I have given thee some light into this mystery concerning the teachings of the Spirit, which if improved by thee, will bring much comfort to thy precious soul, and much joy to him who is thine, and the truth's friend. I R. A Brief summary of those general heads which are in this ensueing Treatise. FIrst, the readiest way to win dissenting brethren to the obedience of the truth, is to deal with them in the spirit of meekness. Under which head is contained the handling of those who are of a contumacious spirit still opposing the shinings forth of divine truth. 1 Admonition which must be once & again. 2 Sharp reproof, and that openly before many witnesses. 3 A Disowning them, and a rejecting them from being of the Church. This admonition includes two things, as 1 A demonstration of the absurdity of the things which they hold. 2 A secret insinuating unto them the truth and the excellency of the opposite to which they hold. 2 The best and the most precious doctrine that is meeting with an unsanctified heart is opposed, and had in derision. 3 That is the best preaching which works upon the affections stirring us up to our spirititual duty that we may serve God acceptably, in reverence and godly fear, all the days of our life, as well as informs our judgements. 4 The Ambassadors of Jesus Christ, and of the Gospel of his grace, must be men of peace, and not study to make factions and parties in the Church of God. 5 For believers to call themselves by the names of their spiritual guides be they never so holy and religious men, or by strange names taken up by the contumelies of ungodly men, is an unchristian thing, and disagreeing to the mind of the spirit. 6 The word of God considered absolutely in itself, as the word of God ought to be the rule and ground of our faith. 7 For men to preach their own inventions and new fangled notions, and the fancies of their own intoxicated brains; or for men to allegorise Scriptures according as their mind serves them, neglecting the pure fountain of the word of God, is to build man's faith upon humane wisdom, and not upon the power of God. 8 A servant of Jesus Christ must suit his style and matter according to the judgement and capacity of his hearers. 9 There are secrets in Gods own keeping which all the learning in the world can never attain unto, only the spirit reveals them. 10. Those that have the Spirit of God cannot but know the things of God. 11 There is no other way but by the Spirit to know the things of God. 12 Only the Saints have this privilege to enjoy the Spirit, which the world cannot receive. 13 The Spirit of God comes by receiving, as a free gift of God unto believers. 14 The spirit of the world is acted with a divers spirit from the Spirit of God. 15 The World hath a double evil spirit. 1 Satan. 2 That inbred spirit of wickedness which is within it. 16 Satan is a Spirit because of his working, which is suitable to the nature of spirits. He is the spirit of the world upon a double account. 1 Because he acts in the world. 2 Because the world is willingly acted by him. A double Antichrist 1 Mystical sin. 2 Personal. That man of sin. 17 Whatsoever opposeth Jesus Christ, or sets itself up in the plaoe of Christ, is Antichrist 1 Our own righteousness is Antichrist. 2 The devil is Antichrist. 3 The world is Antichrist. 4 All moral wisdom, and humane knowledge is Antichrist, unless it be sanctified by the Spirit of God. 18 The children of God are acted by a double spirit, opposite to the spirit of the world. 1 The Spirit of God. 2 The regenerate part within them which is called a spirit. 19 The Spirit the third person in the blessed Trinity proceedeth from the Father & the Son. 20 The Holy Spirit is God, which is proved 1 By Scripture, 2 By reason: as 1 Because those attributes are applied to the Spirit which are only proper to God, 2 Those works: 3 That adoration and worship which only belongs to God. 21 God gives all things freely in opposition to merit, and in opposition to compulsion. Under this conclusion is answered an objection arising from the death of Jesus Christ. 22 None can know the things of God, but those who have the teachings of the Spirit upon their hearts. Under this Conclusion is showed, 1 The various acceptations of the word Spirit in Scripture. 2 What the teachings of the Spirit are: 1 By way of praemonition, that it is very difficult to know them. 2 Positively. 3 How the teachings of the Spirit may be distinguished from the motions, and from the impressions of the Spirit. 4 How the Spirit teacheth, 1 By enlightening our understandings, that we may see the things of God. 2 By removing the enmity that is in our wills against them. 5 What things more especially the Spirit teacheth: 1 To know God, 1 His love to believers in Jesus Christ, 2 His holy nature, 3 The exact justice of God against every sin 2 The Spirit only hath showed us the mystery of the blessed and incomprehensible Trinity. 3 The mystery of the Incarnation of Christ. 4 The evil nature of sin: Where is proved, that the first motions to sin, are sin, and an objection arising from them dissolved: 5 To understand the word of God aright. 6 Several other things the Spirit teacheth: Many other practical duties the Spirit teacheth 6 What manner of teachings the Spirits teachings are. 1 Infallible teachings: Here is showed the difference between the Devil's revelations and the teachings of the spirit. Wherein is answered an objection arising from the infallibility of the Spirit. 2 They are inward teachings. 3 Evident teachings. 4 Irresistible teachings. 5 Arbitrary teachings. 6 Determinating fixing, and quieting teachings. 7 They are consonant to the Word of God. 8 Effectual, powerful, transforming teachings. 9 Quiet and comfortable teachings. 10 Abiding teachings. 11 Uniform teachings. 12 Only teachings. 6. Prove the conclusion, that only those that know the things of God can have the teachings of the spirit upon their hearts. Where that place of Scripture is opened, 1 Cor. 2.14. The natural man receiveth not the things of the spirit of God, because they are spiritually discerned. Because all the men that have not the spirit are either bewitched or besotted, or overcome with the power of some domineering lust, or drunken with the pleasures of sin, or have no other light to judge by but that little spark which is left within them since the fall which is overpressed with the corruptions of sin, or are guided by sense which is not able to judge aright of spiritual things. 7. Make application. 1. By way of insormation, to show that the greatest part of Christians are void of the spirit, from that place of Scripture, 2 Cor. 3 17. Where the spirit of the Lord is, there is liberty. Now most Christians are in a state of bondage. Wherein you have three respects how the spirit is called a spirit of liberty. 2. By way of exhortation, to stir you up to seek after the spirits teachings upon a three fold account. 1. It is a singular blessing to be taught by the spirit. 2 The teachings of the spirit are better than all other teachings; and the wisdom of the spirit is better than all other wisdom whatsoever, for these reasons: 1. All other knowledge it breeds distraction of mind, and pierceth the soul through with many sorrows. 2. A little knowledge with true grace is better than all the knowledge in the world without the light of the spirit. 3. Other knowledge it puffeth up, but the light of the spirit it humbleth. 4. All other knowledge it doth but furnish a man that he might be a more able instrument for the Devil, and to carry on his designs in the world. 5. All other knowledge will but aggravate our condemnation, because it is not sanctified by the spirit. 6. All other knowledge it is subservient to the light of the spirit. 7. All other knowledge will never make a man a good Christian. 8, All other knowledge will never satisfy and quiet our souls. 9 All other knowledge is but vanity and vexation of spirit. 10. All other knowledge it rather hinders then promotes the salvation of men. 11. God hath a time when he will blast upon all humane unsanctified knowledge. 2. If thou art taught by the spirit, it is an evident sign thou art the friend of God. 3. If thou art taught by the spirit, it is a true sign that thou art instated into the Covenant of grace. 8. Give several signs whereby we may know we are taught of the spirit. 1. He that is taught by the spirit of God, is of an humble spirit. 2. He is of a joyful spirit. 3. He that is taught from above will not grudge at the dispensations of God to others, but will do what lies in his power to teach others. 4. He that is taught of the spirit is a man of another spirit than he was before. 5. He is of a meek spirit. Wherein you have the several kinds of meekness opened, and what it is to be of a meek spirit. 6. He that is taught of the spirit is one that seareth God. Wherein you have the several kinds of fear declared, and what it is to fear God aright. 7: He that is taught of the spirit will still desire to have further discoveries of the spirit upon his heart. 8: He that is taught of the spirit is of a heavenly mind, and can perform all duties in a spiritual manner. 9 Show what are the extraordinary teachings of the Spirit from the ordinary. 10. This head is discovered in four particulars. Declare the times wherein the spirits teachings are most manifest. 1. In times of affliction. 2. Near the time of death. 11. Answer several doubts and questions arising from the spirits teachings. 12 Declare that it is the duty of every Christian to walk up to that light which God hath given him: 1 To the light of nature. 2 To the light of conscience. 3 To the light of natural improvements; moral education, good examples. 4 To the light of the word, which includes both Law and Gospel. 1 Those that have only the light of the Law, aught to walk up to that light. 2 It highly concerns all Christians to walk up to the light of the Gospel, because of the nature of this most excellent light, and the aggravations of their sins who sin against it. 5 To the sight of the conviction of the Spirit of God. Reasons. 1 Because every one shall be judged according to what measure of light he hath received. 2 From the nature of light, which manifests to us our evil deeds, that thereby they may be reform. 3 Because he that walks not up in some cases to the light of his conscience, offends in not so doing. Where is showed in what cases we may walk according to the light of our own consciences. The Teachings OF CHRIST'S SPIRIT Upon the Hearts of BELIEVERS. 1 COR. 2.12. Now we have received, not the spirit of the world, but the Spirit which is of God, that we might know the things which are freely given unto us of God. IN the former Chapter, the blessed Apostle of the Gentiles, after his wont salutation to this Church of Corinth, in the 10th verse of the same Chapter, he exhorts them to unanimity and concord of spirit, to wit, that there be no dissensions among them, but that they be knit together in one mind and in one judgement: And to bring them over to this oneness of spirit, of being knit together in love, he doth not come in a rigorous way pleading his authority, as the Apostle of Christ, or the power of the Keys, or Church censures, or denouncing the threaten of the Law, and the curses of God; but by a sweet and alluring compellation, calling them brethren, and befeeching them in the Name of Jesus Christ, he wins them over to the obedience of the truth. Hence observe, That the readiest way to win gainsaying brothers to the obedience of the faith, Note. is not to be of a fiery spirit as James and John were, and presently to count them as disjoined and disunited from the body of Christ, and to count them enemies to the power of godliness, and to excommunicate and dismember them: but as good spiritual bonesetters, according to the Apostles word, Gal. 6.1. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Gal. 6.1. Metapho ra à Ghirurgis artus dissolu tos leviter connect entibus. Mal. 3.2, 3 To restore our fallen brethren with the spirit of meekness, and to pray for them daily, and to expect their reunion, when the light of the spirit shall shine into their hearts through the face of Jesus Christ. Till Christ shall sit as a refiners fire, and purify the hearts of his people, as the Prophet Malachy hath it, and shall make them willing in the day of his power to receive the truth in the love of it: But yet we ought to distinguish, Psal. 110.3. Rom. 14.1 and to make a difference between the precious and the vile, between him that is weak in the faith, and him that offends out of malice and obstinacy, and knows that he is in a wrong way, and will not be reform. With the later we are to deal in a more severe way openly, 1 Tim 5.20. Mat. 7.6. Mat. 18.17. rebuhing them before many witnesses, and if they still persist & turn to Dogs, and rend us, then let them be unto us as Heathens or Publicans, and let them be given over to Satan for the destruction of the flesh, 1 Cor 5.5. that their spirits may be saved in the day of the Lord Jesus. I find that the Scripture useth several Greek words to express and show forth the various ways we ought to proceed withal in handling those that have erred from the faith. 1. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Admonition, a friendly and courteous telling them that they are not in the right way, and that as long as they stick to these principles and adhere to those false conclusions they are to seek in the things of God. Beseeching them to examine them by the light of the Word, and the Spirits speaking in the hearts of others, who have further discoveries upon their hearts of the truths of God, and of those things which accompany salvation than they, and to judge according to the analogy and proportion of Faith: Rom 12.6 To beseech them to examine upon what grounds they close with these opinions, and of the ground of their faith, and of the reason of their hope. For we are not upon Trust and upon bare Tradition to close with any Doctrine delivered unto us, though it comes with never so fair a species of truth, 1 Joh 4.1. but to try the Spirits whether they be of God or no, and be always ready to render a reason of our Faith, 1 Pet. 3.15 and of the work of Grace upon our hearts, to every one that shall require it of us. And to search into the lives of those men who endeavour to draw us to their opinions, Gal. 6.13. whether they are those that seek themselves, and their honour, and the pleasing of their own humour, or the advancement of the Kingdom of Jesus Christ in the hearts of his people: Now this admonition it must not be once, but again and again, till by the power of the Word, and the bright shining forth of truth, they being overcome by the beauty and the excellency and the power of it, (for what is stronger than truth) they be overweaned and prevailed upon to a sincere and hearty affection to it. Now this 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or Admonition includes, 1. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, falsae doctrinae, a demonstration of the absurdity, and the falsity of the opinion they are in love withal, as the Apostle Paul did, who proved Justification to be of Grace, and not of Works, showing the impossibility of it by an Antithesis between Works and Grace: If it is of Works, Rom. 11.6 it is not of Grace, otherwise Grace is no more Grace. We must first show them that they are in a wrong way, before we can persuade them of the right: Saith Solomon, Prov. 14.12. There is a way which seems right to a man's eyes, but the ends of those ways are death. Now till a man sees that death and destruction follows and attends his ways, he will never seek after Wisdoms path, and the ways which tend to life. Act. 8.3. Act. 9.1. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. As long as Paul was nurtured up in the Jewish doctrine, and insensible of the depravation of it, he was enraged in his spirit against the Church of God, haling men and women to the Judgement seat; but when once the Spirit had convinced him of the weakness of that dispensation under which he lived, Rom. 10.1 and that the Law was not able to bring any thing to perfection, and the Ceremonial Law is Statutes which were not good, Ezek 20.25. as the Prophet Ezikiel calls them; and that he cannot be justified by the works of the Law, he presently disclaims whatsoever formerly he embraced, counting all things but loss and dung in comparison of the excellency of the knowledge of Jesus Christ. 2. A secret insinuating unto them the truth and the excellency of the opposite to which they hold, saith the Apostle, 2 Cor. 12.16. I beguiled you, i. e. I caught you as fishes are caught in a net, before you were ware, by the power of the Word upon your hearts. We ought to strike the iron while it is hot, and to work upon men's hearts when they are stirred up by a holy compunction of spirit to search into the nature of things. Every time is not fit to deal with men for their souls good, because the spirits of men, according to men's various assections stirred up at such a time, rather than another, are more suitable to receive an impression than at another time, as the stories of Amaziah and Asa will clearly show, 2 Chron. 25. We read of Amaziah that having hired an hundred thousand valiant men out of Israel of the Tribe of Ephraim to assist him against the children of Seir; the Prophet came to him in the Name of the Lord, commanding him to separate these men from the men of Judah, that they might return to their own place. Here Amaziah readily obeyed the Word of the Lord by the Prophet, though to his own damage, with the loss of the hundred Talents of silver. Yet we find in the following verses of the same Chapter, that the same King Amaziah, when the Prophet came to reprove him for serving the Gods of the Nations whom he had overcome, he was wrath with the Prophet, and disobeyed the Word of the Lord. O what a happy issue might many of God's people have had of their admonitions and reproofs upon the souls of others, if they had done it when the soul was of a tender frame of spirit, sensible of its own infirmity, and under the sense of its insufficiency kept low in its own eyes, desiring above all things to be taught by the Spirit. I have known many who at the first onset of a reproof, though sugared over with many sweet words (which is a great oversight in the people of God, Psal. 141.5. and fare from David's temper, who said, If the righteous smite him it shall be as a precious balm, which shall not break his head) who afterwards were as Lambs apt to be guided by the weakest hand. 2 Sam. 15.6. As Absalon is said to steal away the hearts of the men of Israel from his Father David; so we are to win men's affections to ourselves by our plausible and affable carriage, and allure them by a selfdenying frame of spirit to yield unto us. As the Poet says, — Peragit tranquilla potestas, Quod violenta nequit.— It is reported of Musculus, that by his gracious behaviour to the Anabaptists in his time, visiting them in prison, exhorting them and beseeching them to be reclaimed, he did more prevail upon them to their conversion, than the Magistrates could do by their imprisonments and punishments. 2 Tim. 2.24. But the servant of the Lord must not strive, but must be gentle towards all men, apt to teach, suffering the evil. Instructing them with meekness that are contrary minded, proving if God at any time will give them repentance, that they may acknowledge the truth. 2. To rebuke them sharply: Greek, Tit. 1.13. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Cuttingly, to lay open the Word before them that twoedged Sword, and to press it home to the conscience, v. g. as if they were to deal with one that denies the resurrection, as the Saducees did, to set home with the evidence and demonstration of the Spirit, that is plainly and powerfully that place of Scripture which Christ objected against them, Mat. 22.32. I am the God of Abraham, of Isaac and of Jacob, the God not of the dead, but of the living. This is it which Ecclesiastes speaks of, Eccles. 12.11. when the Word is nailed home by the Masters of Assemblies: 2 Tim. 2.15. this is rightly to divide the Word of God, giving to the stouthearted sinner its portion. Ministers are not to fear the face of man, Eph. 6.20. because they are the Ambassadors of the ever living God, but to particularise sinners, as Nathan did David, 2 Sam. 12.7. saying, Thou art the man. Saith God by his Prophet Hosea, Hos. 6.5. I have slain them by my Prophets. The Word of God it kills the unregenerate part, and makes us dead to the customs of the world, but quickens the regenerate part within us. It either divides between Christ and us, and then it is the savour of death unto death; 2 Cor. 2.16. or either between us and our sins, between us and the world, between us and our carnal corrupt reason, and then it is the savour of life unto life. It is called a fire, Jer. 23.29. because as the fire consumes the dross, and purifies the metal, so the Word it purifies the dross in our hearts, and of reprobate silver it makes us fit for the use of our spiritual Master Jesus Christ. And although they may resist thee and shift off the truth, and hate the light, and are become thine encmies because thou dealest plainly and powerfully with them, as Paul speaks of the Galatians, Gal. 4.16. Am I become your enemy because I tell you the truth. Act. 7.54. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Instar serrae dentes frendebant. Yea though they may gnash upon thee with their teeth, as the malicious Jews did at Stephen, yea though they may persecute you for your zeal, yet know this that thou hast performed thy duty, and delivered thy own soul, Rom. 12.20. i e. Either by thy rendering good for his evil, thou hast gained thy Brother, and caused him to render love for love. (For love is a certain secret fire enkindled in men's hearts by a sympathy with the object which allures, still blazing forth and aspiring to be united with the thing loved.) Or if thou shalt not gain thy brother by thy Christian carriage, thou shalt heap coals of fire and brimstone upon his head to his everlasting torment. and thy reward is with God, Thou hast heaped coals of fire upon his head, and fuel for his everlasting burning. But thy reward shall be as great as if thou hadst reclaimed him, seeing thou hast not been wanting on thy part to do thy duty. 3. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Tit. 3.10. i e. Recusare & repudiare. To give them over to the swing of their lust, and to let them have their liberty in their pernicious ways, and for a time to divorce them from our company, from having any communion or society with us (as a Husband doth divorce his Wife, who is given over to a spirit of Whoredom) so to give them, as it were, a bill of divorce for the future to have any spiritual commerce with them, as the word imports, till God by his blessed Spirit shall bring them out of the snare of the devil. Analogical to this is the Apostles phrase, he that loves not the Lord Jesus, let him be Anathema Maranatha, that is, 1 Cor. 16.22. let him be accursed till the Lord comes, till Christ who is the Lord shall arise in his heart, and dispel the clouds of sin and ignorance, and the daystar arise in his heart. Like to this is the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 deflectere, to turn aside from them till their eyes shall be enlightened, to discern between truth and error: saith Christ, Mat. 18.18. Whose sins you bind on earth shall be bound in heaven, etc. So that the Church of Christ, which includes both Pastor and People, excommunicating a profane Esau, or a licentious Libertine, or a scoffing Ishmael, or a falsehearted Disciple, or a rotten member that hath a postatized from the faith, or one that hath fallen into some gross sin to the scandal of Religion, till they have repent, is seconded by God in heaven, as acting that Discipline and Jurisdiction which he hath enacted in his Church. Simile. As a dead member in a man's body joined to the living members, doth but annoy and hinder them, as if a man had one leg which were quite dead, and utterly useless, it were better it were cat off than that is should remain united to the rest, for it rather hinders the rest of the members than profits them; so it were better that all these dead members, fruitless branches in Jesus Christ, Joh. 15.2. walking Saints, talkative Christians, were separated from the Church of God, especially if they are discovered to be so by some notorious fault, or Apoflacy, till they are renewed again by repentance, than that they should defile and annoy the Church of God. Saith the Prophet Haggai, Hag. 2.12. An unclean thing may defile a thing which is clean, though a clean thing cannot purify an unclean. ☜ Aster an unclean person or an hypocrite is discovered, if they cast him not forth and excommunicate him, he defiles the Church and the Ordinances of God, but if he be not discovered and goes for a Saint, and hath a name that he lives when he is dead; Rev. 3.1. and according to the Apostles phrase, Heb. 10.29. 2 Pet. 2.1. for one that was sanctified by the blood of the Covenant, and bought by Jesus Christ, though in God's sight he be a wicked wretch and abominable hypocrite, he defiles not the Church, because he is not discovered. After the Apostle had exhorted them to unity of Spirit in the later part of the seventh Chapter, he comes to show the different success his Ministry had in reference to Jew and Gentile. The preaching of the cross of Christ to the Jews a stumbling block, and to the Greeks soolishnese. Hence Observe, That the best and the most precious doctrine that is meeting With an unsanctified heart, Note. it is opposed and had in derision. The Doctrine of the Cross of Christ, a most precious sweet and heavenly Doctrine, a Doctrine full of comfort, a Doctrine rending to the establishing of weak dejected sinners, laden with the burden of their sins, the most soul-comforting Doctrine that ever was delivered to the sons of men; yet this Doctrine will not go down with the Jews and with the Greeks, but to the Jews it is a stumbling block, and to the Greeks soolishness. What word more comfortable than a crucified Christ? Joh. 1.14. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Unigenitus. Col. 1.15. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Frimogenitus. Heb 1.3. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Mat. 3.17. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Filius ille meus dilectus in quo complacitus sum. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. His most dear Son, the Son that lay in his Father's bosom from all eternity. The Son of him who is the Ancient of days. Joh. 10.18. Heb. 1.1. a crucified Christ for a wretched forlorn sinner. God's greatest mercies have been the most a bused. God had but one Son, one only Son, one only wellbeloved Son, one only wellbeloved Son who was the express Image of his Father's person, who was full of grace and truth, who was daily his delight, the delight of God the Father, in whom he was well pleased, who was altogether lovely, who was coequal with God the Father, and thought it no robbery to be equal with God; this beloved Son, his only begotten Son, God out of his infinite love to mankind sent in the fullness of time into the world with a message of reconciliation to redeem sinners, enemies, rebels, and a postates from the very womb, and yet what hard measure did the Lord of Life, who willingly came down from the bosom of his Father, and freely offered himself a ransom for our souls, being to deal with the hardhearted and cruel Pharisees, find in the world, as the History and Passion related by all the Evangelists do fully show forth. Yea how is the Gospel of Peace, the Gospel of glad tidings brought to light by the appearance of Jesus Christ in the world! How is it despised and rejected and counted as nothing! Yea how are the precious servants of Jesus Christ, who bring the good tidings of peace to poor souls, and the Olive branch of salvation in their lips, how are they despised and made the offscouring of the world in this present age! God hath a controversy with the Jews at this day, for spilling the blood of Jesus Christ, for the curse is upon them when they said, Mat. 27.25. Let his blood be upon us and upon our children. And certainly God hath a controversy with this Nation for the injuries done to the faithful servants of Jesus Christ, and when God comes to reckon for blood, the blood of God's Ministers will lie the heaviest: As one drop of Christ's blood, by how much he is more precious than all the sons of Adam, yea than all the Angels of heaven, is of more worth than ten thousand worlds, and will lie heavier upon the heads of them on whom it falls. Mat. 21.38. As it was a heinous fault for the Husbandmen to whom the Vineyard was let out, to slay the Master of the Vineyards own son, and shall be more severely punished, so next to Jesus Christ, the blood of the faithful Ministers of Christ will weigh the heaviest, heavier than all the blood of the Prophets slain from the blood of Zacharias the son of Barakias, Mat. 23.35. whom they slew between the Temple and the Altar, Heb 8.6. 2 Cor. 3.6. which Christ so much aggravates upon, the Jews, because they are the Ambassadors of a better Covenant, and Ministers of the New Testament, not of the Letter, but of the Spirit, which Christ hath confirmed with his own blood. O that this were not one of England's giant sins, which lies heaped up in God's account, and makes the inhabitants of the Land odious in his sight! You must observe you do not only kill the Ministers, when violently by the hatchet you sever their heads from their bodies, but when by your unkindness towards them, and your little regard you have to their labours, their tears, fastings, watch, studies, consuming of their bodies, and their strength, you break their hearts and kill them by your unchristian carriage. There is the life of many a precious Minister God hath to plead with as for, whom the world little takes notice of. Now as the preaching of a Christ crucified was to the Jews a stumbling block, and to the Greeks foolishness, so it were to be wished that there were not many in this time who mock at the Cross of Christ, Heb. 11.29. Which place some do apply to the sin against the holy Ghost. and are guilty of that great sin that the Apostle speaks of in the Hebrews, of trampling under foot the precious blood of the Son of God, and counting it an unholy thing, while they do not magnify Christ Jesus in their hearts, and in all things give him the pre-eminence, Col. 1.18. and receive him for their Saviour and Redeemer, Joh. 6.26. for Him hath God the Father sealed for this very purpose to reconeile us to God; and to serve him as their Lord, seeing he hath done so much for them, and purchased them at so dear a rate: When they will divide their hearts between Christ and their sins, and give Christ one part and sin another, all the week Christ is not in their thoughts, and on the Lord's day they think to recompense God and to make even scores by an outward worship done unto him, as if their present being good will satisfy God and quiet their consciences for all their former evils, which is a general mistake in the hearts of men: Or they will divide between Christ and their own righteousness, which is unrighteousness and abomination in the sight of God. There is no great Monarch can less endure a beggar standing in his presence in nothing but rags and full of bruises and sores and running issues from the crown of the head to the sole of the foot, from whence comes most noisome smells, than God can endure a proud vaunting finner standing before him in his own righteousness: Isa. 64.6. for all our righteousness is unrighteousness, it is filthy rags, and our best services, unless they be tendered in Christ's Name, ☜ are an abomination to the Lord, and a stink in his nostrils. Choose whole Christ and Christ wholly and only, or else thou art an enemy to the Cross of Christ. So in the sixth of John our blessed Saviour having termed himself the Bread of Life, vers. 35. And Jesus said unto them I am that Bread of Life, he that cometh to me shall not bunger, and he that believeth in me shall not thirst. Verse 41. the hardhearted Jews they murmured at him, because he said, I am that bread which came down from heaven. The Jews who had as yet the vail upon their hearts, and whose minds by their own wilfulness and disobedience Satan had blinded lest the light of the glorious Gospel of Jesus Christ should shine in their hearts, had no other apprehensions of bread, When Manna which was the type of Christ came down upon the earth, there was old wondering at it; and it was called Manna, because they said by way of admiration Ma-hu, What is this? And they were very greedy for a time after it. But when Jesus Christ the true Bread, the true Manna came down from heaven to feed our souls, there was no minding of him, because his Divinity was over-vaild in his humanity, they did not admire at God's goodness as they ought to have done: they rejected him. He came to his own, and his own received him not. Indeed they made him the laughingstock of the world. And so Christ may be said to be the wonder of the world, as the Prophet Isaiab saith, I and my children are set for signs and wonders, Isa. 8.18. i c. We are made the maygames of the world, at whom all do deride and wonder. But they did not admire his excellency, and acknowledge him, and seek to him, as it behoved them to have done. but as it fed the belly. But Christ Jesus hath a higher mystery in it, to wit, that he was the true Manna, the true heavenly Bread that feedeth their souls unto everlasting life. In the succeeding verses, 48, 49, 50, 51. when Christ proceeds in declaring himself to be the Bread of Life, that his flesh is meat indeed and his blood is drink indeed. Verse 52. the Jews strove amongst themselves saying, How can this man give us his flesh to cat? In the 60 Verse many of his Disciples when they heard this, said, This is a hard saying, who can hear it. Verse 66. From that time many of his Disciples went back and walked no more with him. Hence you see what carnal reasonings, and sinful objections men's hearts do frame and invent to hinder and oppose the comfort of the sweetest and most comfortable Doctrine. What more sweet to a hungry soul that longs after eternal life, than to be fed and to be nourished with this Bread of Life? It is an infallible sign that you are born of God, ☜ and that your original is from above, and that God is your Father, Christ is your Brother, and that you have higher principles than the flesh and the world to walk by, and that your life is hid with Christ in God, if Jesus Christ the true Bread of Life doth nourish up your souls unto eternal Life: For the axiom holds true in spiritual things as well as natural, A quo aliquid generatur, ab eodem nutritur, from the which any thing is begotten, of the same it is nourished; if you are born of God, you will be nourished by the bread of God; if your original be heavenly, your food will be heavenly; if God were your Father, Christ would be your nourishment and your food. Therefore Christ tells the Jews, who in the eighth of John vers. 41. boasted that God was their Father, vers. 42. proved them not to be the children of God, and that God was not their Father, because they did not love him who was sent of God the Father, If God were your Father, then would you love me, for I proceeded forth and came from God, neither came I of myself, but he sent me. 1 Joh. 5.1. He that loves him that begets, loves him also who is begotten, and if we did love God the Father, we should love Jesus Christ the only begotten Son of the Father, and the Saints who are the spiritual sons of God, begotten of the Spirit, crying in their hearts Abba Father. In the 44th vers. he proves them positively to be the children of the devil, because they serve him and do his works. Christ turns all carnal things into spiritual uses, and changes the nature of them, and like a true Alchemist, turneth brass into Gold; but the Jews on the other side turned Gold into brass, and of all those precious spiritual truths which Christ had delivered unto them, they had base carnal and low apprehensions of. Blessed are they that by a lively faith feed hearty upon the spiritual Manna, while others feed upon the husks with the swine, they have bread in their father's house. In the beginning of the second Chapter the Apostle acquits himself in respect of those former contentions, while one said he was of Paul, another of Apollo, another of Cephas, another of Christ; showing there was nothing in himself or in his Ministry that could occasion such divisions, Chap. 2. v. 1. I came not to you with excellency of speech or of wisdom, declaring unto you the power of God, that is, my preaching unto you was not in lofty strains of eloquence, and high notions, or in a plausible and alluring style, fit to please the ear, and to humour men's fancies, and to make them giddy and unstable in the truth, or in the high flown Rhetoric of the world, which is more suitable to an Orator, or a Comedian upon a Stage, than for a Minister of Jesus Christ; not with the enticing words of men's vanities, but in the demonstration of the Spirit and of power, that is, he preached plainly, yet powerfully and effectually, and feelingly to the conscience, and to work upon their hearts, and to inform their judgements. If I seek to please men I am not the servant of Christ. Gal. 1.10. That is the best preaching which stirs up the affections and desires, ☜ and sets all the wheels a work, and provokes us to duty and to the exercise of piety in our lives and conversations. He is the best Preacher, who by his powerful delivering the Word of God can stir up what affections he pleaseth in the hearts of his people, as it is reported of excellent Bucholcer, that though he were two hours in his Sermon, yet none of the common people were weary of him; and that with such vehemency of spirit, and earnest longing for the good of their souls he dispensed the Word unto them, that he could stir up what affection he pleased in the hearts of his hearers. Neither was the matter he preached so sublime as to make men to admire him and to cry him up: Not Philosophical notions, or critical points of Divinity, or curious questions, or needless Doctrines, but the Lord Jesus Christ and him crucified; For I have determined not to know any thing among you, 1 Cor. 2.2. save Jesus Christ and him crucified. Neither was his delivery and outward carriage and deportment in preaching the Gospel to them, to this end to breed Schisms in the Church, for saith he, I was with you in weakness, and in fear, Yers. 3. and in much trembling, that is, he was so fare from being puft up with those gifts and graces which God had endued him with, that he was among them with much infirmity, in much affliction, and in much contempt as he saith, Who is weak and I am not weak, we are fools for Christ's sake, 1 Cor. 4.10. but ye are wise, we are weak, but ye are strong, ye are honoured, but we are despised. In the 2. Cor. 10.10. For, say they, his Letters are weighty and powerful, but his bodily presence is weak and his speech coutemptible. So that the Apostle was no promoter of Sects and Separations and Parties in the Church, but these divisions came from their lusts, from their carnality and fleshly mindedness; 1 Cor. 3.3, 4. For whereas there is among you envying and strife, and divisions, are ye not carnal and walk as men? For when one saith, I am of Paul, and another I am of Apollo, are ye not carnal? So saith the Apostle James, Iom. 4.1. From whence are wars and contentions among you, are they not hence, even from your lusts that war in your members? It is a sign thou art of a proud impetuous and of an ambitious spirit, if thou art a breeder of dissensions in the Church of God; and that which was falsely charged upon Paul, that he was a seditious person and a disturber of the Nation, and upon Jeremy, Act. 24.5. jer. 15.10. that he was a man of ftrife, may be justly charged upon thee, who for a very light occasion makes a departure from the Church of God: Pro. 13.10 From pride cometh contention, saith Solomon, so thou art of a proud spirit, if thou art of a contentious spirit. Hence observe, Note. That the Ambassadors of Jesus Christ and of the Gospel of his grace must be men of peace, and not study to make factions and parties in the Church of Christ. They should endeavour to keep the unity of the Spirit in the bond of peace. Eph. 4.3. They should endeavour to preserve the truth of God, that so the truths of God may preserve them. For as long as they stand up in God's cause in opposition to the flesh, the world and the devil, God will stand by them and plead for them, and smite through the loins of them that shall rise up against them. Judas v. 3. They must contend earnestly for the faith that was once delivered unto the Saints, and plead with that Whore of Babylon by the sword of the Spirit, which is the word of God, and vindicate the Scriptures from all those foul aspersions, which the locusts of the bottomless pit, together with the Socinians, Arminians, Anabaptists and Quakers of these times have cast upon it. The Church, it is the House of God, and the Word is God's Looking-glass, which he hath set up in his House, whereby all the defects and spots and blemishes which are in God's people may be discerned; and this word is committed to the hands of the Ministers, as trusties and Stewards to give out and to dispense to every soul its portion, as time and occasion shall require. Now this treasure is in earthen Vessels, 2 Cor. 4.7. that the praise might not be of men but of God; and the people are not to be their own carvers, as now adays many are, but to require the word at their mouths, and to obey them in all lawful commands, examining by the Scriptures whether those things be true or no, which they preach, as the Beraeans did, Act. 17.11 and highly to honour them for their work sake. But now if they shall contrary to God's Word set up new Lights in God's Church, and offer up strange fire, as Nadab and Abibu did, Leu. 10.1. and a new Looking-glass in God's House, and appoint those things which God never commanded, neither came it ever into his thoughts to require, and rend the seamless Coat of Christ, that is, the Church, by their inventions and traditions, and seek new doctrines, and new opinions, and vent them forth, that others may follow their pernicious ways: by reason of which, 2 Pet. 2.2. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Exitiis. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Blaspemabitur. 2 Pet. 3.16. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, torquent. Rack the Scriptures. the way of truth is evil spoken of, and captivate the understandings of others by their carnal reasonings, and sinful objections, whereby they wrist the Scripture to their own damnation, and giddy the spirits of weak Christians by their deep notions and Allegorical interpretations, and set themselves up for the only men, and to have other men called by their name, and by that party they are of: What is this but to be of a seditious spirit, and to be the incendiaries of the Church's peace? The Kingdom of Christ is a Kingdom of peace, Omnes literae in nomine Jehovah sunt literae quiescentes, quo observandum est, Deum ipsissimum fore pacis fontem. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. and God is a God of peace, and Christ is the Prince of peace, and the Gospel is the Gospel of peace; Why therefore should not Christ's Ambassadors be the Ambassadors of peace? I am not here against the communion of the Saints by way of Church fellowship jointly to serve God and Jesus Christ in way of distinction and separation from the profane world. But against that venomous humour which is in some men, that to get themselves a name in the world, do seek out and invent some strange and uncouth opinion, and vent it forth with all the fair pretences of truth that possibly can be, that thereby adopting to themselves proselytes, they may walk in the light of their own fancies, and delight in the vanity of their own imaginations. Observe again, That for Believers to call themselves by the names of their spiritual guides, be they never so holy and religious men, or by strange names taken up by the contumelies of ungodly men, it is an unchristian thing, The word Brethren, is very often used in the Acts of the Apostles, in the Epistle to the Romans, and in several other places, Act. 9.30: 10.13: 16.2: 17.10: 18.18. Rom. 12.1. and disagreeing to the mind of the Spirit. Those be the best names which the Scripture useth, as Brethren, Beloved in the Lord, Saints, Christians, Servants of Jesus Christ, etc. It was Luther's charge to his followers, that after his death they should be sure not to call themselves by his Name, that is, not to be called Lutherans by his Name Luther; and why, Did Luther die for you or Christ? If Christ died and was crucified for you, let him be your Lord and Master? But if Christ did not die for you, and I died for you, then let me be your Lord and Master, and be ye called by my Name. This argument the Apostle urged against the proud vaunting Sectaries of his times, who named themselves by the names of their spiritual guides, 1 Cor. 1.13. Is Christ divided? Was Paul crucified for you, or were ye baptised into the Name of Paul? It is a great indignity, and an high dishonour offered to Jesus Christ, who is their Lord and Saviour, and hath purchased them for his peculiar people with his own blood, to be called after other Lords and other Saviour's: 2 Cor. 5.16. Resolve with St Paul, Hence forth to know no man after the flesh, but only to acknowledge Jesus Christ. And say likewise, that though other Lords have had dominion over our faith, and tyrannised over our consciences (as the late Prelates did, and as the tyrannical party of these times do, who would have all men stern their course according to their Compass, and sail where they sail, and do what they do, and speak as they speak) yet now Jesus Christ alone shall be to me all in all. 1 Cor. 1.24. The Ministers of Jesus Christ are not to Lord it over men's consciences, and to impose heavy yokes which they nor their fathers were able to bear, but as the servants of Jesus Christ to become all things to all men, that they may win all. Be not ye called Masters, Matth. 23.10. Be not ye Sect-masters, such as were amongst the Jews, who greedily affected the titles to be called Rabbans and Rabbis, and were the ringleaders of parties and factions. Be not ye such Masters. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Doctores, vel viae ductores. Ringleaders, Sect-Masters. for one is your Master, even Christ which is in heaven. They are not to Lord it over God's heritage, but to account themselves as the servants of Christ, condescending to men of low estate for the good of their souls. And the people must have a reverend esteem of them, as those who are overseers set over them for their good. They must not have their persons in admiration, and esteem of them higher than they are (which thing hath caused God to slain the pride and the glory of the Prelatical party, who advanced themselves above Christ, reason above faith, and humane Learning, which perisheth in the using, above the everlasting Word of God, because they loved the praise of men, more than the praise of God,) as if they were infallible, or they knew all things, or as if the spirit of God were straitened up to that particular person, or to that particular society they are of, or as if they were the only men to be followed, and all others of a different judgement were erroneous, and that it is necessary to be called by their names, as if they were the sum and the top-stones of all piety and knowledge; but they must pray for them, knowing they are men subject to infirmities as well as ourselves. Pray to God to give them a door of utterance that they may deliver the word boldly, and confidently, sincerely, plainly, in the evidence and demonstration of the Spirit, and to desire God to assist them in that great work they have undertaken, and to obey them in all lawful commands, as the spiritual Pastors and Bishops of our souls; and to encourage them in their work by honouring them, and by giving them those Rights and Privileges which appertain unto them. Give unto Caesar the things that are Caesar's, Mat. 22.21. and unto God the things that are Gods. You commit sacrilege and rob God of his due, when ye withhold from the servants of Christ that right which is their own. Will a man rob God? saith the Prophet Malachy, Mal. 3.8. in robbing God you rob yourselves, for hereby you cause God to withhold good things from you. I could wish that there were a fair and equal carriage on both sides. It were to be desired that Christians would rather say they are of the Church of God in such a place, or of the Church of God over which such a man is the Overseer, than that they would say as they commonly do say, they are of such a man's Church. It is the Apostles phrase to the Church of God which is at Coloss, Col. 1.2. Eph. 1.1. Act. 20.28. which is at Ephesus, which is in her house, the Church which God hath purchased with his own blood. Ministers are but God's Vicegerents, speaking unto us in the place of God (for we should never be able to stand before God, and to receive the word from his own mouth, because of the vast sea of guilt which lies upon our consciences, and that infinite distance between the pure nature of God, and our defiled and corrupted souls) they are the mouths of God to the people, but the Church is God's Church, which Christ hath purchased with his precious blood. He it is that keeps the Church from the malice of bloodsucking persecutors; Ps. 121.4. He that keepeth Israel neither slumbers nor sleeps; He it is that destroys the implacable enemies of it, destroying them with everlasting vengeance. He it is that purifies the Church, Tit. 2.14. that by his blessed Spirit doth unite all the members together, Spiritus est vinculum Ecclesiae. Pet. Mart. and at the last day will make of many Churches now scattered up and down, one universal triumphant Church for ever and ever. Let it be therefore the Church of Christ and of God, and not the Church of man: Yet pray have a care of this, that you do not term yourselves the Church of God, when you are of the Synagogue of Satan, Who say they are Christians when they are not, as those hypocritical Jews did in John's Revelation; Rev. 3. but see that you have God's worship rightly administered amongst you, and that ye worship God the Father in sincerity and in truth. Now the Apostle goes on in the same Chapter, showing the reason why he used such plainness in the exercise of his Ministry, to wit, that their faith might not stand in the wisdom of men, but in the power of God, that is, that your faith might not be built upon humane inventions and traditions, but upon the Word of God, which is the power of God to salvation, Eph. 2.20. that you may be builded upon the foundation of the Apostles and Prophets, Jesus. Christ himself being the chief Corner stone. Hence observe, That the Word of God, Note. considered absolutely in itself as the Word of God, aught to be the rule and ground of our faith. St Paul to Timothy, 2 Tim. 1.13. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. 2 Cor. 10.15. Scriptura seu verbum Dei dicitur 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, regula mensura. The word of God ought to be the rule according to which we ought to square all our actions. Leu. 18.5. Keep the true pattern of wholesome words which thou hast heard of me in faith and love which is in Christ Jesus, Greek, The form or lively exemplar of wholesome words. So that that word which the Apostle had committed unto him, to wit, the doctrine of faith and love which is in Christ Jesus, he must keep it and reserve it by him as a most precious treasure. The Law of God is a perfect rule of righteousness, commanding good and forbidding evil: The Gospel 'tis the doctrine of faith and repentance from dead works, that by Jesus Christ we may have eternal life. The Word of God, as it takes in both parts is a complete rule of faith and obedience: The main thing the Law requires is obedience, He that doth them, that is, the Commandments of God, shall live in them. The main thing the Gospel requires is to believe on Jesus Christ, Act. 16.31 Believe and thou shalt be saved. Now Jesus Christ is the sum both of the Law and the Gospel; Joh. 1.45. Of him speak all the Law and the Prophets. He is the substance of the Ceremonial Law, which either typified Christ himself unto us, or represented unto us the benefits which come by him to believers. The Sacrifices were but shadows of good things to come. The Moral Law it is our Schoolmaster to bring us to Christ, Gal. 3.5. for the Moral Law being become weak through our corruptions to bring us unto life, and we being driven through a holy despair of ourselves and of our insufficiency to seek to Jesus Christ, that he would fulfil the Law for us, and that through his righteousness our imperfect sincere obedience might be accepted, the rigour of the Law is taken away, How believers are bound to the Law. so that we are not bound to the strictness of it, as the unregenerate are, who have no part nor portion in Christ, but only as it is a testimony of our obedience to God the Father, and of our hearty love to Jesus Christ. How a be leever is said to keep the Law. Every sincere convert may be said to do the whole Law in an Evangelicall sense, because Christ hath done it for him. Rom. 8.3, 4. For that which was impossible to the Law in as much as it was weak, because of the flesh, God sending his own Son in the similitude of sinful flesh, and for sin condemned sin in the flesh. That the righteousness of the Law might be fulfilled in us, who walk not after the flesh, but after the Spirit. For salvation Jesus Christ ought to be the foundation of our faith, to wit, as the Word of God doth set him forth, a Prophet, ☜ a Priest, and a King; the Word of God ought to be the rule of our faith in respect of discipline and manners: Not the Testimony of the Church, not men's traditions and inventions, but the pure Word of God, which he hath set up for a light in his Church unto the end of the world, which shall never perish, not the least tittle or jota thereof shall fail, but as God is the first eternal truth, so the Word of God is the eternal truth: Cursed shall they be, ☜ yea thrice cursed shall they be, who shall count the Word of God as a thing of no use, and that look for another word, to wit, a Revelation of the Spirit, I know not what revelation, but a delusion of the devil, and a giddy fancy of their own pernicious brains, and shall not receive the Word of God, as the rule of their faith. Zech. 5.4. If the curse of God enters into the house of the thief, and of him that sweateth falsely by his name, how much more into the house, body, soul, estates, relations, good name, posterity, of the sacrilegious thief, who is guilty of most horrid blasphemy, in taking away the Authority of the Word of God, and denying that end for which God hath appointed it? How many are they that cavil at the plainness and evidence of it, because it points out, as it were, with the finger, the evil practices of this crooked and perverse generation? That most blasphemously say, if they had been in God's place, they would have made a better word, wherein every punctillo should have been so plain, that none of those doubts which distract the minds of men should have been in it, and all those false interpretations quite taken away, not knowing what they say. Like that proud King of Arragon, who said, that if he had been in God's place, he would have made the world after a better manner, for which blasphemy he was smitten with a dreadful judgement by God. If men had but a spirit of discerning, and their minds enlightened to see the excellency, and the majesty speaking in it, they would esteem and value it as much as ever, yea much more than they now disrespect it. The Word is clear in itself, but because darkness is upon our understandings, therefore we cannot see the beauty of it. O that we could prise the Word as David did, Psal. 119.72. above thousands of gold and silver; Job 23.12 and as Job esteemed it, more than our appointed food, making it the joy and the delight of our souls. Deut. 6.8. That it may be continually between our breasts, and as a frontlet before our eyes, that we could meditate therein day and night. David out of an admiration of the excellency of God's love, cries out, O how love I thy Law, Psal. 119.97. it is my meditation all the day! He loved it, because he meditated in it, Vbi amor, ibi animus; and this love was so great, that he could not express it, therefore cried he out by way of admiration, O how love I thy Law! and in another place he saith, Psal. 119.11. I have hid thy word within my heart, that I might not sinne against thee; that is, in the chambers of my soul, for the soul of a man is a large cabinet, fit to receive many precious truths against the time of need: Mat. 13.52. (Therefore every Scribe instructed for the Kingdom of heaven, bringeth out of his treasure, that is, out of his heart, things both new and old.) I have treasured up thy threaten against sin and sinners, that whensoever a temptation is offered to sin against thee, I may draw forth a direct command against such a sin, or denunciation of wrath against such a sin: As if he were tempted to uncleanness, he would object Gods direct command against it, Exod. 20.14. Thou shalt not commit adultery. As Christ vanquished the devil by the sword of the Spirit, ☞ saying, It is Written, Mat. 4.7. Thou shalt not tempt the Lord thy God: So should we take the sword of the Spirit, and the shield of faith, whereby we may quench his fiery darts. As that pious Matron, when a lewd Ruffian tempted her to uncleanness, desired of him again to hold his finger one hour in the fire for her sake, at which request, he answering, that the demand was unreasonable, replied, How much more unreasonable is yours, that would have me burn in hell for ever to satisfy your lust? So should we say, How can we do this great wickedness and sin against God? We have his command to the contrary, his Word bids us not to do it, How can we violate the authority of the sacred Majesty of heaven and earth? How shall we be able to stand before God, who is a consuming fire, and commit these abominations in his sight? What a good thing were it if Christians would make a Common-place-Book in their hearts out of God's Word, and by often reading of it, and by that excellent duty of meditation laying it up, that they may have spiritual matter to furnish their souls withal upon all occasions? This is the true pondering of the Word of God. So much of the Word of God as we meditate on, and by meditation is concocted to the nourishment of our souls, so much we have and no more. This hiding of the Word within our heart is an excellent means to further the gift of prayer, whereby we shall have store of matter at all times and upon all subects to render up our petitions unto God. ☜ That is the best prayer that is founded upon the Word of God. How sweetly doth the Spirit of God breathe forth in David's Psalms? and what heavenly expressions there are suitable for a Christians spirit to exercise his faith and comfort in God by, in the greatest trials and most soul-dejecting desertions? This hiding of the Word of God, to wit, the sweet promises which concern salvation contained therein to poor sinners, affords abundance of peace of conscience and consolation of the spirit. Saith David, I have hoped in thy Word: ☞ He is a true emblem of a faithful soul, A true sign of a believing soul. who can trust God for his word sake, and build upon the Word of consolation, who can plead with God upon a bare word of promise; Lord, hast thou not said it, and wilt thou not bring it to pass? If we would by a lively faith, suck eagerly at these breasts of consolation, and dive deep into these wells of salvation, and carry our buckets often to draw, and look to Jesus Christ in whom all the promises are Yea, and Amen, for the earnest of his Spirit upon our hearts, that they may be rightly applied to our everlasting comfort, our souls would be satisfied abundantly as with marrow and fatness. So likewise saith David, Thy Word is a light unto my feet, and a lamp unto my paths; and in the same Psalm, Psal. 119.96. I have seen an end of all perfection, but thy Commandments are exceeding large. The literal Word of God, though it hath a beginning and an end in respect of the letter, yet the Word of God considered Doctrinally, as it is the wisdom of God the Father, it is infinite, like God himself, and hath unfathomed depths of the riches of God's grace to sinners in Jesus Christ, contained in it, Rom. 8. O the depths of the riches of the wisdom of God, how unsearchable are his works, and his ways past finding out! ☜ It is a rich Mine of excellent discoveries of the Almighty God, which never yet hath been searched to the full, though when we come to heaven we shall know abundantly more of it than we do now, and all doubts concerning it fully satisfied, which do so trouble us in the body of this flesh. Let men of corrupt minds talk what they will, that they fully understand the mind of God in his word, by the light of the Spirit speaking within them, that they can unfold all mysteries, and that they need not hearken to the word any longer, but only hearken to the voice of the Spirit speaking in their hearts, because the light of the Spirit is a greater light, they say, than the light of the word, I am certain that they are grossly deluded by the father of lies; for the Apostle Paul, that knew as much of the things of God as any Enthusiast whatsoever, yet did see but through a glass, as it were imperfectly, till this veil of the flesh being laid aside, he shall see God face to face: We know in part. Now if the Word of God be exceeding large, larger than the perfections of all the creatures, so that there is no sin that can be conceived of, but is forbidden in it, and threatened with eternal death, and no grace but what is commanded and exhorted to, under the promise of everlasting life, and the means to eschew the evil, and to embrace the good, fully declared unto us, without all controversy, this and this only is the Word of God, and aught to be the ground and rule of our faith. 2. That for men to preach their own inventions, When men are much addicted to Allegorise Scripture, suddenly they fall into some and new fangled notions, and the fancies of their own intoxicated brains, or for men to Allogorize Scriptures according as their mind serves them, neglecting the pure fountain of the Word of God, is to build men's faith upon humane wisdom, and not upon the power of God. We live in a sceptical age, deadly error, and are caught as it were in a snare before they are ware. What a Solaecism upon his own body Origen the father of Allegories committed, by Allegorising that portion of Scripture, Mat. 19.12. is known to all those that are versed in Ecclesiastical History. wherein most Christians being troubled with that itching humour the Apostle speaks of, are all for novelties and vain questions, which are nothing material to the establishing our souls in grace, and neglect the saving knowledge of Jesus Christ. They are all for light, but little for zeal; all for knowledge, but little for practice; all for notions, but little for truth; all for further discoveries of secret mysteries, but little searching into their own hearts; all for those truths that may inform the Judgement, but little for those truths which may work upon the affections. Lord, A sweet ejaculation. I pray thee to give me no more knowledge than what may work upon my heart to the joining of a hearty obedience unto it; and that above all other knowledge I may seek to know Jesus Christ and him crucified, to be made partaker of his sufferings, and of the fellowship of his resurrection, that as he risen from the grave of death, so I may arise from the grave of sin unto newness of life. Lord grant that while others dive into thy secrets, and search after thy Decrees, and do limit thee who art the holy one of Israel, by speaking of thee irreverently, and ascribing unto thee those things which are not convenient, and as the fly about the candle, never leave prying and approaching too near till they be consumed in the pride of their own hearts, and in the vanity of their own imaginations, I may sincerely and humbly, with all fear and reverence to thy great and glorious Majesty, take thy Name into my mouth, and only speak of thee as the word speaks and no further. Lord thou hast said that thou art Jehovah, Jchovah, Jah, Eheie, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. that is, who hast thy being of thyself, which being is from all eternity, ineluding all the differences of time, past, present, and to come: That thou art Elohim, Almighty; Elschaadai, Alsufficient; Elion, High; that thou art I am that I am, Exo. 3.14. which implies that thou art only of thyself, and art all things to thy creatures; I am bread to the hungry, drink to the thirsty, clothing to the naked, health to the sick, liberty to the captive, comfort to the distressed, I am all things to all men, as they stand in need of me. Is. 43.11. Thou hast said that thou art, and that there is none else besides thee; that thou art but one God, and yet distinguished into three Persons, Father, Son, and Holy Ghost. Lord, let me believe and admire this truth, rather than stand and question it. And for thy Decrees which are as immutable as thyself, for with the Lord is Yea and Amen for ever and ever, I beseech thee grant that I may search no further than what is convenient for me as a creature to know, and thy Word requires that I should search into. These are mysteries locked up in thy own breast from all eternity, which though I cannot attain to in this life to know, yet let me trace the footsteps of thy everlasting providence in thy Word, and admire thy goodness towards them who are elected in Jesus Christ, and magnify thy justice upon all the vessels of wrath to all eternity. This I know, that though thou didst not pass by any in thy act of pretenition, with reference to sin, as thou didst not elect the vessels of mercy with any respect to their future holiness, yet thou never passest the sentence of condemnation upon any, but for their sins past, Yet God doth not condemn a man simply as a sins, for then all should be condemned: but at such and such a sinner, a sinner against great light, against great mercy, a sinner under God's judgement. An unbelieving sinner, unbelief is the great condemning sin. and receivest none into mercy but upon the account of Jesus Christ. And O that there were a heart in me to seek above all things to know thee, and Jesus Christ whom thou hast sent; to seek wisdom and spiritual understanding, which will be unto me a tree of life to preserve me from the snares of death. Thus Lord desireth every true and faithful servant of Jesus Christ. Now as these men have itching ears, 2 Tim. 4.3 so they heap up to themselves such Pastors and Teachers, as may serve their own fancies; and it were to be desired that there were not too many amongst us, who for preferment and for worldly honour, would make the Word of God to stoop to the base lusts of carnal people, and preaching the fictions of their own brain, cause men to build their faith upon unsound and sandy foundations. When men hold forth Jesus Christ to the people, not as the Scripture holds him forth, but according to their apprehensions of him, they build wood, hay, and stubble, upon this precious foundation, 1 Cor. 3.12, 13, 14. which when the day of the Lord shall come, the fire of the Lord shall utterly consume, when every man's work shall be made manifest. Col. 2.23. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. This will-worship, when men will take upon them to prescribe Rules and Canons of God's worship, Mar. 15.3. Col. 2.8. Gal. 4.10. this worshipping of God after the tradition of our fathers, this observing of times and seasons for the satisfying the lusts of the flesh, and not for the service of God, this mixing of our own Ceremonies and Superstitious ways, is odious and abominable in his sight. God cares not how little he hath to do with men in ways of his worship (for whatsoever sacred things we handle, we leave the print of our fingers behind us) but hath reserved this to himself, as one main part of his Sovereignty, to prescribe Rules and give Laws, according to which he requires that men should do him homage. He is that great Lawgiver, who is able to kill and save alive. Jam. 4.12. Now when men dare be so presumptuous and so highly impudent, as to encroach upon God's authority, and to take upon them to assign ways and means of their own finding out to serve God by, what do they but, as it were, condemn the Word of God for imperfection, and God himself for want of wisdom, as if he did not know how to govern his creatures? Yea moreover God hath strictly commanded that we should not mingle our inventions with his worship. Exod. 20.25. Thou shalt not lift up a tool upon my Altar, lest it be defiled. God in this place directly commands in the Antitype, that we should worship him according to the way of his own choosing, and that we should not add the dross of our own corrupted fancies, to the unspotted purity of his holy worship. God hates a mixture of Religion at his very heart, and could not endure that the Israelites should join themselves to the Canaanites, left they should learn their evil way and be defiled. men's inventions and Gods worship will never agree together. As there is but one God, so the way of his worship is one, therefore saith Paul, Act. 24.14. according to the way which ye call heresy, so worship I the God of my fathers: But men of carnal minds consulting with flesh and blood, and not with the everlasting Word of God, have sought out many ways to worship God by. What a forged foppery of humane inventions and man's traditions is the Popish Religion? What abundance of forms and outward worships have they? as if God did look more at the outward man, and external behaviour, than at the hidden man of the heart, the sincerity of our actions, and the purity of our intentions; the Lord judgeth not according to the appearance, 1 Sam. 16.7. but he judgeth righteous judgement. Indeed they have a braver, and more splendid Religion in outward beauty and worship (as a Lady of Paris said, when she saw the Pope going his Procession, What a brave Religion is ours, in respect of the Hugonites? that is, the Protestants) they have richer Temples, and more beautiful shrines, but what is this in the sight of God? as painted glass it rather darkens the light, than adds more light, though it seems more beautiful than plain glass: so men's traditions, though they may carry a beautiful pretence along with them, they rather darken the mind of the Spirit, than add any further light unto the Word. This foundation will melt as the wax before the Sun, in the time of Gods pleading and contending with sinners. Others are too extreme on the other hand, and care not for any decency and order in respect of outward worship, and cry down all outward circumstances and conveniences, because God chief regards the heart. Let such know, that God is the God of our bodies, as well as of our souls, and he requireth outward worship, that we should bow before him, and fall down at his presence, and testify the brokenness and contrition of heart by outward gestures, as well as heart-worship, though that be the principal he aims at. Pray observe, that God looks to every circumstance of his worship, as well as to the essentials of it, yea to the least circumstance, and when he shall come to revenge the quarrel of his Covenant, will severely punish those, who have failed in the least particular of his worship. O that men would consider this, who are all for duty, but little for the right performance of it, after God's way and manner; ☞ all for worship, but care not how they worship God. I find in Scripture, 1 King. 18.28. that hypocrites have been most in duty, Baal's Priests used to cut selves from day to night; Mat 6.7.23.14. and the Pharisees used to make long prayers; but I find that the people of God have studied more how to please God, and to serve him after his own way and method. The circumstances of an action, saith the Philosopher, aggravate the action more than the action itself. You will think Nadab's and Abihu's fault to be of no consideration, Leu. 10.1, 2. as to deserve so great a punishment, as to be destroyed for it; What was their sin? why they offered fire to the Lord, as he commanded, but not that fire which he commanded, that fire which should be continually kept in upon the Altar for that very use, but fetched elsewhere, and therefore 'tis called strange fire, such fire as the Lord never demanded. Let God's Word be our rule, and God's glory the ultimate end and scope of all our actions, and then we cannot do amiss in point of worship, and if we continue in well doing, at the length we shall reap everlasting life. But when men corrupt the Word of God, 2 Cor. 2.17. as the Apostles phrase is, putting new glosses upon it, and making it as a nose of wax to turn every way, according as their genius tends, and it serves for the carrying on of their designs (for how glad are wicked men if they catch at any part of a sentence, which according to their blind apprehensions, though to a judicious mind, and to one enlightened by the Spirit, it is nothing to the purpose?) or handling the Word of God deceitfully, 2 Cor. 2.17. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Cauponantes, Adulte rantes. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. A corrumpendo vine, atque infuscando, ut caupones s●lout. Men adulterate the word, and take away the beauty and the majesty from it, when they think to put a lustre upon it by their own inventions. mixing it, as a Vintner doth water with wine, according to the Apostles word; or neglecting the Word of God, lean to the light of their own understandings, and studying strange and unheardof doctrines, under the name of experimental truths, and which by long experience they have found out, deliver unto the people the scum and the froth of their own vain minds, as the false Prophets of old, who spoke lyingly in the Name of the Lord, saying they had a vision, and a revelation, when they had not, that so both Minister and people might both fall together, and both might be destroyed for ever and ever, and rendering themselves abominable in the eyes of God, they build their faith upon their own wisdom, which is rather folly than wisdom (for every man as the Psalmist saith, Ps. 49.10. by the fall is become brutish in his understanding, and is of a reprobate mind, that is, Tit. 1.16. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, void of judgement. of a mind that cannot approve of the things of God) and neglect the wisdom and the power of God. They cry up themselves as Simon Magus did, for some body, Act. 8.9. for the great power of God, as he for his miracles was termed so, and delighted in this appellation: so these would be so termed for the abundance of the Revelations, and the great measure of the Spirit which they pretend to partake of, as if they were the only lights in the world, and the Oracles which God hath set up in his Church. Lord I beseech thee by the power of thy sanctifying Spirit, to destroy this Babel in the hearts of those who are thy people, that they may not build their faith upon lying vanities, and trust to the sparks of their own understandings, 1 Sam. 5.4. but that this Dagon of superstition and false worship, of will-worship, Col. 2.23. and of that worship which seems to carnal flesh glorious and beautiful, 2 Cor. 7.1. may fall down at the appearance of Jesus Christ in their hearts, that being kept from the pollutions of the flesh and Spirit, they may perfect holiness in the fear of God: for as long as this wisdom of the world is in us, which is foolishness in thy sight, there is no room for thy word, or for Jesus Christ, who is the eternal wisdom of God the Father. Joh. 6.27. Let us not build our faith upon traditions and men's inventions, and feed upon that meat which perisheth (for all ceremonies, customs, and will-worship is but perishing meat) but upon the Word of God as our rule, and Jesus Christ for our Saviour, that so we may find comfort and peace of conscience at the hour of death, and in the world to come everlasting life. To proceed in the context, the Apostle having showed that he did not preach the wisdom of the world; yet to magnify his Doctrine, and that he might give it the pre-eminence, Vers. 6. he saith, Yet we preach wisdom amongst those which are perfect, yet not the wisdom of this world; that is, though our preaching be plain to you, who are but as babes in understanding, yet we can preach in a higher style and more profound matter amongst those which are perfect, that is, amongst those who are men in understanding, and more knowing in the things of God, vers. 7. We speak the wisdom of God in a mystery. Ver. 8. Wisdom which the world cannot attain unto. Vers. 9 Eye hath not seen, nor ear heard the things which God hath prepared for them that love him. Hence observe, Note. That a servant of Jesus Christ must suit his style and his matter according to the capacity and judgement of his hearers. Saith Luther, Optimi ad Vulgus sunt concionatores qui popularitèr, pnerilitèr, & trivialiter docent. They preach best to the common people, who preach in the plainest way and method. The converting of souls to Jesus Christ, and the building up Christians in the most precious faith; and comforting sad dejected spirits, and destroying the Kingdom of Satan in the hearts of wicked men, and to dispossess them of the unclean spirit, and to convince gainsayers who oppose the truth, and to vindicate the purity of the Word of God against men of reprobate minds, is the work and main business of a true Ambassador of Jesus Christ, and not to seek their own applause and credit in the world, by showing their learning and their abilities, instead of setting forth the glory of God. 1 Cor. 14.8. If the trumpet shall give an uncertain sound, who will prepare himself to the battle? Isa. 58.1. and if Ministers who are to lift up their voices like a trumpet, and to show God's people their transgressions, and the house of Jacob their sins, shall give an uncertain sound, and shall speak in an unknown Language, or in a strain exceeding the capacity of most people, how shall they be able to prepare themselves against the battle to fight with sin, and to undergo temptations and afflictions, and to save themselves from the overthrow of the ungodly world? I have read of those that have repent they have preached too profoundly, and have not done that good for the Church of God which they might have done, if they had preached in a more humble manner; but I never read of any that repent, because they preached too plainly. 1 Cor. 14.19. St Paul saith, I had rather speak five words with my understanding, than ten thousand words in an unknown Tongue. Yet to explain the Original, and to show the copiousness or the emphasis of the word in the Greek and Hebrew, is a thing very commendable and praiseworthy, as our eminent English Commentators in their Comments do, and those who are acquainted with the Original do, as every Minister of Christ should be: or sparingly to quote some eminent Pillar in the Church of God, for the further enlightening, or for the present confirmation of that matter which we have in hand. Tit. 1.12. St Paul noted the Poet Epimenides, when he said, The Cretians are always liars, and the Poet Araetus, in the Acts, when he said, Act. 17.28 As one of your own tribe hath said. As it was said of Christ, Now thou speakest plainly, Joh. 16.29 and speakest no parable, so it should be said of Christ's Ambassadors. Saith God to Ezekiel, Son of man, Eze. 16.2. make the house of Israel to know their iniquities. It is one thing to preach against sin, and another thing to make the people to know their sins, that they may be ashamed and confounded for the evil of their ways. But amongst the higher-grown Christians, we are to deliver the mysteries of God, Heb. 5.12, 13, 14. Heb. 6.1. 1 Pet. 2.2. we are to preach the wisdom of God, that wisdom that the world knoweth not of. Strong meat is for strong Christians, but milk for babes and children. Quest. But some might ask the Apostle how he came to partake of the wisdom of God, and of this wisdom which the world cannot attain unto? You are brought up at Gamaliels' feet, Act. 22.3. and according to the Law of the strictest Sect of the Pharisees; Act. 26.5. we can say of you, as they said of Christ, we know whence you are, Joh. 7.27. and where you were brought up, How came you therefore by this wisdom you speak of? The Apostle by way of preoccupation says, God hath revealed these things unto us by his Spirit. Hence note by the way, Note. That there are secrets in Gods own keeping, which all the Learning in the world can never attain unto, only the teachings of the Spirit of God can acquaint us with it, and there are some things which God reveals but to a few persons in several ages of the world. Heb. 11.7. Only a Noah can foresee the ruin of the old world, and prepare an Ark for the saving of his house; Gen. 19.12. a Lot the destruction of Sodom and Gomorrah; Christ Jesus the miseries that were coming upon Jerusalem; Mat. 24. Luther the miseries that were coming upon Germany; Augustine the destruction coming upon Hippo in Africa; and Mr Calvin the persecution of God's Church that should follow his departure. Only those that are taught of God have their eyes in their heads, and that Christian prudence to foresee the evils that are coming upon the earth. Pro. 22.3. etc. 27.12 The wicked go on and are punished, but the wise man, that is, the spiritual wise man, forseeth the evil and avoideth it. Then the Apostle goes on to show that if we have the Spirit of God, we cannot choose but know the things of God: for the Spirit searcheth all things, yea the deep things of God. Gen. 41.38. It is the Spirit that discovers the secrets of God to his people, and makes them to know the hidden things of God's counsel; Dan. 4.8, 9.5.11, 14. therefore Daniel is said to be a man in whom the Spirit of the Gods are: And John when the Revelation was committed unto him, is said to be in the Spirit, Rev. 1.10. I was in the Spirit on the Lord's day; say the Schoolmen, Spiritus est amor, & amor est nexus Sanctae Trinitatis, ex boc sibi volentes, Spiritum procedere & à Patre & à Filio, & candem numericam essentiam cum Patre & Filio habere, & Patrem à seipso, Filium per Patrem, & Spiritum à Patre & à Filio omnia efficere. Now if there be such an unconceivable union between God the Father, God the Son, and God the holy Ghost, certainly the communion is as great (for from union ariseth communion) so that whatsoever secrets are in God, the Spirit being one with God the Father, the Spirit only must deliver and convey them unto us. I speak now of these Gospel-times, Vrim & Thummim Perspicuitas & Veritas. Urim ab On Hebraicè lux Thummim à Thammim Hebraicè integer. Teraphim, ab Hebraico verbo Teraph sanare, quia cum malè afficiebantur Teraphim consulebant. Teraphim crat caput humanum odoratum, & unguentis delibutum. wherein dreams, and visions, and the appearances of Angels, and Urim and Thumim, and all ways under the former dispensation have ceased; yea all Diabolical ways have failed, for now there is no consulting of Teraphim, of Oracles, of the Sepulchers of dead men, but the Spirit is now more plentifully poured forth, according to the Gospel Covenant, Ye shall be all taught of God; and in the 2d of Joel, speaking of the days of the Gospel, wherein this mystery of Godliness shall be revealed, it is said, They shall be all taught of God. The Apostle proceeds to show that it is impossible any other way, but by the Spirit of God, to understand the things of God: For what man knoweth the things of a man, save the spirit of a man which is in him? even so the things of God knoweth no man, but the Spirit of God. As no man can know what are the intents and purposes in the heart of another man, unless by conjecture (for the devil who is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, q. Sciens, an old experienced seducer, of almost six thousand years standing, by all his knowledge, cannot know positively the heart, this is God's prerogative only, I the Lord know the heart, but by our actions, and by the temperament of our body, and by the exorbitancy of our affections and unruly passions he doth conjecture the bent and the frame of our spirits, and accordingly suit his various temptations) which is more deceitful than any thing else, yea so deceitful that we ourselves cannot know the depths of it: For if our hearts condemn us, God is greater than our hearts and knoweth all things: Now if we cannot know the things which are in another man's heart, much less are we able to know the secrets of God's breast, but by the Spirit of God. The Spirit is the great interpreter of God's mind, the great revealer of God's secrets, the great unfolder of the mysteries of heaven, that knoweth all the counsels and decrees passed between the Father and the Son from all eternity. Quest. But some may say, How came you by the Spirit? whence is it that you have the Spirit? The Apostle by way of anticipation saith in the words of my Text, We have received the Spirit, the Spirit is given unto us. And so having done with the Context, and having showed the connexion of the words, I am come to the subject matter of my ensuing Discourse. We have not received the spirit of the world, but the Spirit which is of God, that we might know the things which are freely given unto us of God. In the words you have, 1. Something employed. 2. Something expressed. The thing implied is, That only those who have the teachings of the Spirit, can know the things of God. In the words expressed, you have these parts. 1. The spirit of the world put in opposition to the Spirit of God, implied in this particle [But,] We have not received the spirit of the world, but the Spirit which is of God. 2. The end for which the Spirit of God is given or received by the faithful, to wit, that they may know the things of God. 3. The manner how God gives his things, to wit, Freely, That we may know the things which are freely given unto us of God. More particularly. First, We have the Subjects in which, or the Patients in which the Spirit of God is expressed in the particle [We,] We have not received the spirit of the world, but the Spirit which is of God. We the Apostles and Disciples of Christ, together with all the faithful of Jesus Christ. Only the Saints have this privilege to enjoy the Spirit. Saith Christ, I will send you the Comforter, even the Spirit which the world knoweth not, John 14.16, 17. and I will pray the Father, and he shall give you another Comforter, that he may abide with you for ever, even the Spirit of truth which the world cannot receive, because it seeth him not, neither knoweth him; but ye know him, for he dwelleth with you, and shall be in you. O sweet and heavenly place, full of marrow and fatness to the godly, but full of terror to the wicked. Art thou a child of God? the Spirit of God dwells with thee, and shall be in thee. Pray observe the words, he not only dwells with a Saint, and as it were 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, How the Spirit is in a believer. an assistant unto him, but the Spirit of God is in a Saint. And as Christ and a believer is as it were all one, so the Spirit of Christ and a believer is said to be as it were all one. See what a near and unexpressible union there is between God and a gracious soul, Joh. 17. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Chrysostom. I in them and they in me, that they may be one even as we are one. We shall have a likeness and a resemblance of that union which is between God the Father, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sicut nou nota aequalitatis sed fimilitudinis ut variis locis Scripturae ostendere poffimus. and Christ, though not the same for substance. The Spirit not only dwells, but hath its in-being in every Saint. And as we cannot see our own souls, because they are of a spiritual nature, and so not subject to any of the outward senses, but we know we have a soul by the immediate operations of it. We know we have a rational soul, because we understand and are able to infer one thing out of another; Anima infert unum ex hoc, & hoc ex alto. Angclus unum post hoc, one thing after another. The Spirit of God dwelleth not in the Saints essentially, more than in other creatures: yet the faithful have a special right to the essence of God's Spirit, and he dwelleth in them by way of special efficacy. Downam. An immortal soul, because incorporeal, and not subject to change, as considered in itself, but only in respect of divine power; A sensitive soul, because we walk, eat, drink, and do the actions of living creatures: so we cannot see the Spirit of God within us, but we know we have the Spirit, because it quickens, it comforts, it upholds, it sanctifies us, and stirs us up to our spiritual duty. He that hath Christ, hath the Spirit of Christ; every Saint of God hath Christ, and therefore he hath the Spirit of Christ. As faith unites us to Christ on our part, so the Spirit unites us to Christ on his part. If any man hath not the Spirit of Christ, he is none of his. Rom. 8.9. The world is void of the Spirit, because they cannot receive it. As they cannot receive Christ, so they cannot receive the Spirit. Christ makes his abode in no soul but an empty soul. Ps. 107.9. Luk. ●. 53. He filleth the hungry with good things, but the rich he sends empty away. A full stomach loathes the honeycomb; and a carnal soul filled with the pleasures of sin, and with the satisfying of fleshly lusts, hates the sweetness, and the rich treasures of grace and mercy which are in Jesus Christ. The Spirit of Christ loves to dwell in an empty soul. Now the world is full of an impure spirit; and while this spirit keeps the room of the heart, there is no place for the Spirit of Christ. O that this worldly spirit were dispossessed and cast out, this unclean, filthy, abominable spirit, that the holy Spirit of God might enter in. Our hearts must not only be swept, but washed, before the Spirit of God will enter in. You read, Matth. 12.44. that when the house was but only swept, the evil spirit returned again with seven other spirits worse than before; but when our hearts are once washed, the Spirit of God will, presently enter. jer. 4.14. Wash thy heart from filthiness, O Jerusalem, how long shall thy vain thoughts lodge within thee? jam. 1.21. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Wicked men may sweep their hearts from that superfluity of naughtiness Saint James speaks of, and may remove the excrescencies and the open break forth of sin, they may lop the boughs, and as it were pair the nails (all which is but a superficial piece of work, and a light piece of business) but the godly only, we who have the Spirit of God, Tit. 3.5. we only have our hearts washed with the water of Regeneration, therefore we and we only have the Spirit of God. Secondly, Here is the way by which, or after what manner they came to have the Spirit, We have received it. They came to have it by receiving: It is not said, we have purchased it, or we have obtained it by our prayers, or by our duties, or the like, or we have bought it with our money, Act. 8.18. as Simon Magus thought to have bought the holy Ghost, but we have received it: 1. How the Spirit is received. 1. The Spirit it is a free gift. Luke 11.13. Gal. 4.6. As a free gift, given by God to believers in Jesus Christ. The Spirit it is a free gift. God is said to give us his Spirit. How much more shall your heavenly Father give his Spirit to them that ask it of him. Because ye are sons, God hath sent the Spirit of his Son into our hearts, crying Abba Father. From this place we must not think our Sonship is the cause why we have the Spirit, Quia pro ergo. Because] It is not causal but illative & rational, in this place, or rather demonstrative. for the Spirit goes before Adoption, now the effect doth not go before the cause, but follow it; but because ye are sons, that is to witness unto you that ye are the sons of God, God hath sent the Spirit of his Son into our hearts, crying Abba Father. 2. As a promise of Jesus Christ. 2. We have received the Spirit as a promise of Jesus Christ at his departure: Christ when he was to leave the world promised to send another Comforter, even the Spirit of truth. Christ deals with his Church as a loving friend doth with his friend: You know when friends are going a long journey, or a dangerous voyage by sea, they use to leave behind them with their dearest friends some pledge or token of their love. Some leave their pictures, some a ring, some a good book, some one thing, some another, with this saying, When you look on this, remember me, and though you should see me no more, yet be not troubled, here is a pledge of my love which I have left with you, keep it, be sure you keep it, and do not part with it. So our blessed Saviour, that he might not leave his Church altogether comfortless at his departure, Luk. 22.14, 15, 19 first of all, he leaves his Sacraments with them, as lively pictures and emblems of his death and sufferings, so that in the Sacrament of the Communion of the body and blood of Christ, when we see the bread broken, we should remember, and present to our view the break of Christ's body upon the Cross; and when we see the wine poured forth, remember the pouring forth of Christ's blood upon the Cross, and this do, remembering the Lord's death till he come. Secondly, His Peace, My peace in opposition to the sottish peace that the world giveth, My peace I leave with you. joh. 14.27 joh. 15.26 Thirdly, His Spirit, I will send you the Comforter: so that we are to receive the Spirit as a promise of Jesus Christ. 3. 3. As a redundancy of God's love. As a redundancy and fruit of the Father's love. As Christ is a most eminent fruit of the Father's love, so is the Spirit. As Christ sends the Spirit, so doth God. 4. 4. As a testimony of our adoption. Rom. 8.16 As a testimony of our Adoption. The Spirit witnesseth with our spirits, that we are the children of God. Our spirits do nothing avail to the grace of Adoption, without the comforting Spirit of Jesus Christ. The Spirit of God, lindx; if it withdraws its testimony for a while, our souls are even in Hemans case, Psal. 88 at the brink of despair: And before conversion, before the Spirit witnesseth, our spirits like Nabals, are sottish and secure like a dead piece of flesh, insensible of the greatest evil. If the Spirit comes by receiving, and not by any thing in us, but is a fruit of the Father's love, what a Popish spirit are they of, who think to procure the Spirit by their prayers and by their duties? Though Christ hath promised to give the Spirit to those that pray, yet not for their prayers. We are to pray for the Spirit, because God hath commanded it, but not to expect it for our prayers, because God hath promised it. The Spirit of God comes by receiving, therefore whosoever thou art that thinkest, by thy endeavours to have the Spirit, though I will not curse thee as Paul did Simon Magus, for thinking to purchase the holy Ghost with money, though he had but such a thought in's heart; yet I tell thee thou shalt never have it. Pray for the Spirit, but look not to obtain it by thy prayers, but only by the way of receiving. Thirdly, The spirit of the world put in opposition to the Spirit of God. 1. A remotione subjectorum infertur diversitas for marum, quia lapis non est idem subjectum cum plantâ, ergo habet diversam formam, ratio, quia in omni subjecto debet apta esse organizatio membrorum, ut melius forma introducenda suo munere fungatur. In omni vero subjecto promiscuè sic dicto, non datur sufficiens organizatio membrorum, quo quaelibet forma suas operationes exerceat. In lapide non dantur organa satis, quo anima sensitiva, quod suum est exercere, exerceat. Non datur organum videndi in lapide, nec inplantâ. By way of remotion in respect of the subject. We have received not the spirit of the world, i. e. The world hath its own spirit, and the children of God have theirs; different subjects have different forms: Now the world is not only different, but divers, quite another thing, and other men, considered with the people of God, therefore have they different spirits; and not only different but divers. The Spirit of God makes us altogether other men, and other persons than we were before. When the Spirit of God comes into the heart, all old things are done away, and all things are become new. There is a Metamorphosis, a transmutation, non ex hoc, sed ab hoc in aliud totalitèr diversum, from corrupt nature to grace, from the flesh to the Spirit, from darkness to light, from being the children of the devil to become the children of God, from the power, flavery and dominion of sin and Satan, unto the glorious liberty of the children of God; from the fullness of the devil, of sin, and of the world, to that fullness which is in Christ, to that fullness which is of God: Joh. 1.16. Of his fullness have we received all grace for grace, that is, one degree of grace after another. That ye may be filled with all the fullness of God. Ephes. 3.19. Not so as Christ's humanity was filled with the fullness of God, for the Spirit was not given unto him by measure. Plenitudo gratiae est duplex. 1. Respectu suipsius. Quando aliquis consequitur ultimum gradum gratiae, & quoad essentiam & quoad virtutem, in tensiuè & extensiuè, ut aiunt, qui habes gratiam juxta omnes illius effectus & operationes, secuudum quas se potest extendere. Hoc modo Christus tantùm gratiam habebat. 2. Respectu subjecti. Quando aliquis habet plenitudinem gratiae secundum suum statum & conditionem. Sic Stephaum dicitur esse plenus Spiritu sancto. And in him dwelleth all the fullness of the Godhead bodily. But we as imperfect creatures in this life, shall receive of that communicable fullness, or of that fullness which can be communicated to creatures as creatures, fullness of grace, and fullness of the Spirit, according as we are able to receive it. Every thing which is received, is received according to the capacity of the receiver; a bucket can hold no more water than what is meet for a bucket to hold: Now we who are but as the drop in the bucket, and as the dust in the balance in his sight, that are not able to receive all the fullness of God, but only all that which may be communicated to the creature, and that is very little in this life, though in the lise to come our buckets shall be enlarged, i. e. our souls made of a more capacious nature, and we shall be able to draw more abundantly, and to contain more of this ocean of happiness. We are commanded to be filled with the Spirit, Eph. 5.18. Be ye filled with the Spirit; and as Commentaors observe, the former clause of the verse being this, Be not drunk with wine, the later clause of this verse may be interpreted likewise, But be ye drunken with the Spirit. This is a good drunkenness to be drunk with the Spirit, as those in the Acts were, who were drunk in a spiritual sense, though not in that carnal sense as they judged them to be, because they were filled with the Spirit. The world and the godly are quite Antipodes, the world is acted by a worldly spirit, and the people of God by the holy Ghost, which appears by that malignity which hath been in the world since the Creation, against the people of God, the first actings of which were seen in cain's murdering his brother Abel. Simile simili gaudet, like rejoiceth in its like, and if the world and the children of God were alike, they would love one another. Saith Christ, If you were of the world, joh. 15.19 the world would love you, but seeing you are not of the world, and I have chosen you out of the world, therefore the world hateth you. Sed est particula, discretiva, seu disjunctiva apud Logicos. 2. This opposition between the Spirit of God, and the spirit of the world is implied in this particle [But] We have received not the spirit of the world, but the Spirit which is of God. Here I should show the difference and that vast discrepancy between the Spirit of God and the spirit of the world: But because for the future, when God shall enlarge my spirit, and occasion may be offered, this may be a fit subject for a future Discourse, I shall omit this as not belonging to my present intent and purpose, only by the way I shall distinguish between a double spirit by which the world is acted. The world hath a double evil spirit. 1. Satan that evil spirit, Ephes. 2.2. Wherein in times past ye walked according to the course of this world, according to the Prince of the power of the air, the spirit (〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, & per modum eminentiae, emphatically) that now worketh in the children of disobedience. Here we have two Epithets ascribed to the devil, and both as he hath relation to the world. 1. He is called the Prince of the world, the Prince of the power of the air, i. e. the Prince of all the infernal brood that are in the world. And the word Air, is put Synecdochically as a part for the whole, for the world and the inhabitants thereof, because God hath given him power by his permission, to raise commotions in the air, and to do seeming miracles, as appears in the story of Job, Job 1. when he caused a wind to come from the four parts of the earth, and to smite the four corners of the house, when it fell down and killed the children of Job. A strange wind that could smite all the four corners of the house all at once. Now because the devil's greatest power is seen in the air, by doing his seeming miracles, in that he is called the Prince of the power of the air, is meant, that he is the Prince of this world. Agreeable to this is that place, where he is called, the God of this world, and the Prince of darkness. 2 Cor. 4.4. The god of this world hath blinded their eyes, lest the light of the glorious Gospel of Christ should shine in their hearts. The devil is the great Master of misrule in the world, and he it is that breedeth all the confusion which is in it. He is that great sower of discord amongst men, and he will sow his tares amongst the wheat, Matth. 13.25. and breed quarrels and dissensions amongst the children of God: he is a great slanderer, a great accuser, full of enmity against God and his Saints. He is the envious one; and all envious, proud, discontented lying persons are the devils subjects. He is that cunning Politician, wiser than all the Achitophel's, Judass, and Maehiavillians that ever were, and knows how to play his cards for the best advantage to allure souls to come under his government, and ever since the Creation he hath been plotting and contriving how to root out the Gospel, to persecute the Saints, and to destroy the Church of God here upon earth. He hath stirred up and provoked his evil instruments, his great engines, wicked Emperors, and bloodsucking Popes (the Power of the air) in all ages to persecute the Church of God, and to banish it out of the world: But blessed be God who hath preserved himself a name upon the earth, and though the Egyptians, Babylonians, Turks and Insidels, and all the wicked men in the world, did combine together under their leading Captain Satan, against the Lord and against his anointed, and against his precious servants, and thought to swallow them up alive at once, and to devour them altogether, that the name of God might be had no more in remembrance, that yet God hath reserved himself a name upon the earth, and a peculiar people to show forth his praise, and hath drowned the Egyptians in the red sea of eternal vengeance. What is the reason that the Church hath been preserved against the cruel assaults of furious persecutors, and against the rage of the devil so many thousand years? Why I will tell you, as the devil is the Prince and God of this world, so Christ Jesus is the King of Saints, Rev. 15.3. and the Prince of the Church, and God is the God of his people. Now which do you think is strongest, 1 Pet. 5.8. God or the devil, that roaring lion the devil that goes about seeking night and day whom he may devour, or the Lion of the Tribe of Judah? Which more politic, Rev. 5.5. Rev. 12.9. the serpent or Jesus Christ, who is the wisdom of God the Father? Prov. 8. Which is the likeliest to prevail, or which party hath prevailed in all ages, hath not the Church? Vincit patiendo Ecclesia, the Church overcomes by sufferings, as the Israelites in Egypt, the more they were afflicted, the more they grew. And though the Church hath been small in all ages, in respect of the enemies, and of Satan's party, yet the Saints of God might truly say, Let the enemies part be never so numerous or great, that there is more with them than against them; and why, because God is with them. He is the Saviour of his people. Exod. 24.24. That God, who but with a look from heaven could destroy all the Egyptians, that God who can destroy them but with the breath of his nostrils, job 4.9. Exod. 10.12. who can cause weak and inconsiderable creatures to punish the foolishness of his adversaries. Isa. 40.12. That God who measureth the waters, and spanneth the earth, and holdeth it in the hollow of his hand, that God who created all things, and if will say but the word, can lose the fabric of heaven and earth, and turn it to its first nothing, Dan. 5.23 that God whose is our breath, and in whose hands are all our ways, that disposeth of Kingdoms, and giveth them to whomsoever he pleaseth, that taketh the crafty in their own deceit, Job 5.12. and destroyeth the wisdom of the wise: Last of all, that God who hath at this time the devils fast bound in everlasting chains of darkness, Judas v. 6. unto the day of judgement, and hath thousands of cruel persecutors under his hands, whipping them with Scorpions to all eternity, Rom. 9.5. that God, who is over all blessed for ever; he is the God of the Saints; and therefore no wonder if the Church prevails, and hath prevailed, and will prevail to all ages The gates of hell shall not prevail against it. Matth. 16.18. We read in the Book of the Revelation, Rev. 12.12 that the devil is come upon the earth with great wrath and malice, because he knows that his time is short. Saith a Learned Commentator, God may lengthen the devil's chain, and give him more liberty than formerly, but he never quite looseneth it, and lets him do what he listeth. He knows that in these last times his Kingdom is going down, and that Christ is fulfilling his work, and that he will make but a short work upon the earth. He knows it is best to be doing while the opportunity is put into his hand. And what in former times he could not do by power and by persecution, he endeavours in these later times to do by policy. Formerly he was a red Dragon, a ravenous Wolf. a cruel Tiger, but now he is become an Angel of light, 2 Cor. 11.14. and comes in a more secret and mysterious way, yet his malice is as great as ever against the Church, though he rides not upon the pale horse of death; Rev. 6.8. and he endeavours by all means to increase his Kingdom to the everlasting destruction of poor souls. O that there were a wise heart and a considering heart in Christians to consider this, that now we are fallen into the last times, and the devil now bestirs himself more than ever; that he is doing all he can do with all his policy and subtlety to advance his Kingdom, and to gain proselytes to maintain his cause, listing soldiers daily under his banner; therefore we should be a more praying people, and a more watchful people, continually pleading at the Throne of grace, that God would accomplish his work upon the earth, and hasten the coming of Jesus Christ, the bringing in of the Jews, the fullness of the Gentiles, and the destruction of Gog and Magog, Pope and Turk, with all the rest of the antichristian party. 2. He is called the spirit of the world, the spirit that now worketh in the children of disobedience. He may well be called a spirit, because of his working. The manner of Satan's working upon the wicked. He being a spirit hath a great influence upon our spirits; and he can not only suggest his temptations, and put evil things into our hearts, but like a skilful fouldier he can marshal them, and put them in order before our eyes, and set home the object upon the heart with all the delight, if an evil thing; and with all the detestation, if a good thing, that possibly he can. He doth not only morally persuade us, but by a secret indiscernible way, (for the operations of spirits, especially of one spirit upon another, are very mysterious and difficult to be understood) but by a willing compulsion draw forth the heart to entertain the motion. It is said that Satan stirred up David to number the people. 1 Chron. 21.1. Joh. 13.2. And that Satan put it into Judas heart to betray Christ. And that Satan hath blinded the minds of them which believe not. 2 Cor. 4.4 There is a threefold blindness in an unregenerate man: A threefold blindness in the ungodly. 1. A natural blindness. 2. A contracted blindness, by their long continuance in ignorance. Wicked men are wilfully ignorant concerning the Commandments of God. 3. A blindness which Satan superadds over and above those two. Satan can work insensibly upon the passions of the body and the images in the fancy. And as he can delude our outward senses, making us believe we see such things, when they are not such as they are presented unto us, so he can delude our minds and hoodwink our understandings, and by his Paralogisms, and false argumentations, reason us to a hatred of God and his ways, to embrace the pleasures of sin and the works of darkness. We read of the Energy of the devil, Eph. 2.2. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, which worketh effectually in the children of disobedience. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Efficacia, est verbum usitatissimè relitum actionibus formarum & spirituum, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 operatio ●nima. Arist. The more spiritual any thing is, the more force and power it hath to work, and the more insensibly it sets home the impression upon another. Conceit in many men worketh strange things. A mere conceit of such a thing, or of such an evil approaching, hath driven men into deep melancholies and great sadness of spirit, into strange diseases, passions and furies. If a mere conceit will do so much, how much more will the way of reasoning of one spirit, by strength of argument work upon another spirit? Arguments are spiritual weapons, ☜ and he that stands to argue the case with the devil, fights with the devil with his own weapons. Who is the great disputer of this world? the great Sophister? the great Logician? but the devil. He useth all sorts of arguments to raise fears and jealousies in the hearts of God's people, to drive them to despair, and to keep wicked men in their carnal security and desperate presumption. He is the spirit of this world, he is the great agent that commonly sets all the wheels and the springs a going. That drives furiously as Jehn did, How Satan is said to be the spirit of the wicked world. hurrying wicked men in their pernicious ways. The devil is the spirit of the world upon a double account: 1. He acts in the world, and quickens and puts vigour, and brings forth into act, that original corruption that lies rooted in the heart of all men by nature. The work of the Spirit it is to give life, and heat, and motion, to cherish and refresh, to excite the parts to do their office. Now as the Spirit of God moved upon the waters in the first Creation, hover over the Mosaical matter, fomenting and cherishing it, so the evil spirit the devil moves upon the filthy puddles in our hearts, hover over that filthy corruption which is in us, cherishing and fomenting that body of death which we carry aboot us. As the Vulture loves to feed upon dead carcases, so the devil loves to rake up that stinking cartion matter which is in the hearts of all men by nature. Now the devil is not only an assistant spirit to the world that sees the wheels a going (as the assisting Angels are, ☞ which Aristotle supposeth to set the primum mobile a work) but he worketh with us, and he worketh in the world. Sometimes our hearts like a mint out of that abundance of corruption that is in them, may coin evil things, for sin in the heart will appear in the life; obscene and filthy words do naturally flow from a lustful heart: But yet the coin often carries upon it the devil's stamp; Pliny speaks of the scorpion, that there is not one minute, wherein it puts not forth the sting, as being loath to lose any opportunity of doing mischief: so Satan will lose no fit time to tempt us, to draw us to his allurements that he might destroy us. Burrought Moses choice: if he sees us inventing mischief, he will be sure to put to his helping hand. Many times the devil is the father of evil thoughts, but our own hearts are the mother, the devil suggesteth, but it's our own hearts that conceive, according to the Psal. mist. They conceive mischief and bring forth falsehood. It is the devil that blows up the fire of lust in our hearts, and adds fuel to it by his delicious objects. That makes men rush into sin, as the horse rusheth into the battle. As we commonly say, he must needs run whom the devil drives. Satan did but put it into Judas his heart to betray his Master, and presently he sets about his business. As soon as the devil had entered into him, he runs headlong to the destruction of his immortal soul. When a man hath wind and tide, and the sails be up, he must needs go apace. Our affections are the sails, our carnal interest and selfseeking is the tide, and the devil is the wind. If our sails are up, ☜ and the tide favours us, the stream of the times, or our Dallilah lusts do prosper, and the devil comes and adds wind to the tide, and flatters us in our ways by promising us the same gales of prosperity still, we fail apace and in abundance of delight for a time, till at length we fall down into the Mare mortuum, into the dead sea of everlasting misery. Think upon this, who with a full career swim down with the current of the times, and care not whither you are carried, so be it your carnal interest may prosper, and that you may have the favour of a flattering world. You are acted by the devil, and certainly at death he will pay you your wages. He is that filthy, unclean, Idolatrous spirit that keeps the world in their superstitious ways, and which to this day beguiles the poor Indians, and holds the greatest part of the world in Idolatry, and Heathenish impiety, to the great dishonour of the true God, and to their own everlasting condemnation. 2. He is the spirit of the world, because he not only acts the world, but also because the world willingly suffers itself to be acted by him. Wicked men are said to be led captive by him at his will. 2 Tim. 2.26. He leads them in a string to eternal perdition. As a Falconer carries his Hawk upon his fist, so the devil carries poor creatures. They do not take up arms to fight against him, Wicked men most properly are said to act evil. And because they willingly submit themselves to the devil; while they are acted by the devil, they may be said to act, because they do not resist him. The godly are rather acted to evil, than said to act evil, because they do that which they allow not, and which under a serious debate with themselves they utterly hate. but they willingly subject themselves to his Government, preferring the devil before Christ, and these transitory enjoyments before the God of heaven. I may say the world is a sworn enemy to Jesus Christ, and a faithful drudge to do the devil's drudgery. As Christ admits none but volunteers, and suffers none to be of his society, but they that willingly submit themselves to his discipline: so the devil hath a great army of volunteers, and they willingly accept of his terms and conditions: This only is the difference, the godly do take Jesus Christ for their Lord and Saviour directly, and as they serve Jesus Christ who is the great Master, so they love him and embrace him for their Head and Governor; but now the wicked world doth not directly take the devil to be their Lord and Master, for the thought of a devil is odious in the hearts of all, both good and bad, and none would be said to be the devil's servants; but in as much as they voluntarily do his works, and subject themselves to his yoke, they may be said indirectly, and by consequence, not only to have the devil for their Lord, Joh. 8. but for their father. Ye are of your father the devil, for his works ye will do. 2. As the world hath Satan for its evil spirit, so it hath another evil spirit, to wit, that imbred evil spirit of wickedness, that natural frame of spirit in the hearts of wicked men, continually tending to the ways of sin. This worldly spirit, this spirit of sin, or this sinful spirit, 1 Joh. 4.3. it is called the spirit of Antichrist, for there is nothing so opposite to God the Father, God the Son, and God the holy Ghost, as sin is, and this spirit of sin within us. What a worldly spirit is. When men have an impetus of spirit, or a propensity and a full bend of will to sin, than they are said to have a worldly spirit. When their hearts are set upon the world, and upon their sins, and they will contrive all the ways, and spate no cost and charges to bring their wicked designs to pass. A spirit of Idolatry. Men are said to have a sinful spirit of Idolatry, when they will undergo any danger, and count nothing too much to lose, so by it they may keep their Idols amongst them. A spirit of Adultery. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, oculos plenos adulterae. Men have a spirit of Adultery, when their eyes are full of Adultery, and are so impious, that one might see the whore sitting in the adulterer's eyes, and they will spend their estates and their time, and all they have upon their beloved whores. When men covee after riches beyond measure, and care not how they grow rich, so they have it, and pull the meat out of the poors mouths by usury and extortion, and never think they have enough, than they have a sinful spirit, that worldly spirit of covetousness. This spirit of sin it is not only a spirit of Antichrist, but Antichrist itself. There is a double Antichrist, 1. A mystical Antichrist, A double Antichrist. and this is sin. 2. A personal Antichrist, which is excellenthy described by St Paul in the 2d to the Thessalonians, where he is set forth by several characters, as these, 1. By his sin, he is called That man of sin, v. 3. 2. By his parnishment, The son of perdition. 3. By his pride, He exalts himself above all that is called God. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. 4. By his policy, he is called, The mystery of iniquity. 5. By his hypocrisy, He works with all deceivableness of unrighteousness. 6. By his success, Many thousands shall come in unto him. So likewise in the Revelation this personal Antichrist is excellently described, the number of the Beast agreeing with Irenaeus his AATEINOS, and Gregory the 3d, Bishop of Rome, pointing out, as it were by the finger, Gregory the 7th; otherwise Hildebrand, or the brand of hell his successor, whom Phocas the Usurper, having slain his Master Mauritius, caused to be proclaimed universal Bishop, and Head over all the Churches of God. Then began this mystery of iniquity to show itself. But there is a generation of men in the world, that hold there is no other Antichrist but sin, and that impure spirit of the world, that spirit of Antichrist, denying that there is any personal Antichrist at all. But they are grossly mistaken, for this delineation which the Apostle holds forth of Antichrist, cannot agree to things but to persons. Howsoever sinne it is a mystical Antichrist, and that which makes the personal Antichrist to be an Antichrist; 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. A thing may be said to be Antichristian, or to be Antichrist in a double respect, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sumitur aliquando, & significat, 1. Pro, seu vice alicujus. 2. Contra, & sic fine compositione, & in compositione accipitur. 1. When it is set up in stead of Christ, and stands in his place. 2. When it opposeth and fighteth against Christ. Sin is an Antichristian thing, or a mystical Antichrist upon this double account; 1. Because it sets itself up in the heart of an unregenerate man in the place of Christ. It is Christ's prerogative to have the heart. My son give me thy heart. Sin steps into the throne, and stands there in Christ's place. There is something of Antichrist in the best men that are upon the earth, because sin remains within them. Saith the Apostle, What I would not, that I do, Rom. 7. and what I would, that do I not, now it is no more I, but sin that dwelleth in me. 2. Sin it is a mystical Antichrist, because it opposeth Jesus Christ, and fighteth against him; sin it opposeth Christ in all his Offices, as a Prophet, a Priest, and a King; in his Sacraments, in his worship, in his Word, in his Ambassadors, and in his Saints. Our own righteousness in the former respect is Antichrist. When men establish their own righteousness, they destroy the righteousness of Christ, and make it of no effect. The devil is Antichrist in both respects, for he sets up himself in the place of Jesus Christ, Matth. 4. Angel's could fall no other ways, but by a ceflex of their understanding upon themselves, when being held with an admiration of their own sublimity, the memory of their subordination unto God, and their dependency on him, was drowned in this conceit, whereupon their adoration, love, and imitation of God, could not but be interrupted. Thus M. Hooker. He seeks to be worshipped with the same worship which God is worshipped withal. Saith the devil to Christ, If thou wilt fall down and worship me, all these things will I give thee. He tells a lie to make up the bargain, as if he had the power of the earth to bestow it on whomsoever he pleaseth, when the earth is the Lords and the fullness thereof. The devil desires nothing more than to draw men's hearts from God, and to have that worship given unto him which is due unto God alone. Pride was the cause of his fall, as appears by that place, 1 Tim. 3.6. Ordain not a novice, lest being lifted up with pride he fall into the condemnation of the devil. And since the fall, through the pride of his mind, he hath sought in all places to set up his worship in place of the most pure worship of God. Idolatry in Scripture-phrase is called worshipping of devils, 1 Cor. 10.10. Rev. 9.20. and in worshipping Idols they worship him. And as it is reported he hath feigned voices in the air, commanding that such a Saint departed should be worshipped. As Romulus after he was dead appeared again (or the devil in the shape of Romulus) commanding that he should be worshipped for a God under the name Quirinus. And therefore that was the devil in samuel's mantle, 1 Sam. 28.14. and not Samuel himself, because he permitted Saul to worship him. The devil is Antichrist also, because he opposeth Christ. Christ had two eminent conflicts with him, one in the wilderness, where the devil was in presence with him, tempting him to have unbeseeming thoughts of God the Father, Mat. 4. If you be the Son of God, command that these stones be made bread: as if he should have said, Certainly if God were your Father, he would not let you be in so great straits as to want bread. Earthly parents give their children food when they want, how much more shall God the Father give his only begotten Son, if thou art he, those things that are convenient for him? It is not agreeable to the everlasting providence of such a Father, who is Lord of heaven and earth, to see his child to be in want; command therefore that these stones be made bread, do a miracle that we may see thou art the Son of God. God the Father will work a miracle, before he will see his child to want. This the devil did to take away his mind from the love of God his Father, and to drive him from his faith and confidence in God. Besides, it had been a sin in Christ, if he had obeyed the devil. Christ had another sore conflict with the devil, though not immediately, yet mediately by Peter; observe the subtlety of the devil, seeing he could not prevail upon him in a public way, he comes upon him in a more covert way, tempting him in a beloved Disciple. Jesus Christ. speaking of his sufferings that were to come to him at Jerusalem, Peter dissuades him from going up thither; but what answer did Christ make him? Get thee behind me Satan, Matth. 16.23. for thou savourest not the things which be of God, but the things which are of men. Christ presently espied out Satan in Peter, though a beloved Disciple, though a Saint, though one that spoke out of a good will to Jesus Christ, and out of a desire not to have his Master die. ☜ O that we could so suddenly espy the devil tempting us in his wicked instruments, and when they tempt us, cry out, Avoid Satan, as Christ did. So that Satan is Antichrist, and he is called Satan, because he is Christ's and the Church's adversary, Apoliyon, the Destroyer, the roaring Lion, the subtle Serpent. As the world hath a double evil spirit, to wit. Satan and that inbred wickedness that is in the world; so the children of God have a double Spirit, 1. The holy Spirit of God. 2. The Regenerate part within them: As appears by those two places; Joh. 3.6. That which is born of the flesh is flesh, and that which is born of the Spirit is Spirit. The flesh lusteth against the Spirit. By Spirit may be meant, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. either the holy Spirit of God striving with us by his motions and impressions, or the Regenerate part within us, which is called a Spirit. The unregenerate part the corrupt flesh is called a spirit: saith James, Jam. 4.5. The spirit within us lusteth to envy, i.e. that fleshly part within us is full of envy. Lusteth to envy, the same word which is in the place, the flesh lusteth against the Spirit. And it is observable, that the same action that is applied to the flesh, is applied to the Spirit, the flesh lusteth against the Spirit, and the Spirit against the flesh, i.e. lusteth against the Spirit. Now if the same action is applied to both the principles, to flesh and Spirit, to wit, lusteth (which action is a proper action of spirits) therefore the unregenerate part is a spirit. And if the unregenerate, much more the regenerate. But you will say it is a contradiction to call the flesh a spirit. Indeed to say natural flesh were a spirit, it were a contradiction in the very terms, but to say flesh, i.e. corrupt flesh, is a spirit, is no contradiction, but an abuse of the word. But you will say, Analogum per se positum stat pro famosiore significatu, therefore seeing flesh is put alone by itself, it must not be meant of corrupt and sinful flesh, but of natural flesh. To this I answer, That the unregenerate part is not Analogically but Aequivocally called flesh. It is improperly so called, because original sin by natural generation is propagated from the parents to the children; according to the series of generation, sin running continually in a direct line, though itself be the only obliquity. Fourthly, We have a divine attribute noting the Deity of the blessed Spirit, in this particle [Which is of God.] We have not received the spirit of the world, but the Spirit which is of God; this phrase in that the holy Spirit is said to be of God imports three things. 1. That the Spirit proceeded after an ineffable manner from God the Father, Hic processus apud Graecos dicitur 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Abusiuè tamen. not excluding God the Son. Agreeable to this is that axiom in the Schools, Dius Pater est principium Sanctae Trinitatis, non tamen causa. Principium ordinis, sive relationis, non essentie seu Deitatis. 2. Which is of God, Per Hebraismum, which is God. But the Spirit which is of God, i.e. but the Spirit which is God. 3. Which is of God] that is, which came from God: Saith Christ, I will pray the Father, and he shall send you another Comforter. Joh. 14.16 Hence note these two Observations, which I shall briefly discuss and so pass over. 1. That the Spirit, the third Person in the blessed Trinity, proceedeth from the Father and the Son. Not from the Father, excluding the Son, as the Eastern Churches say, but from the Father and the Son jointly considered. From the Father, and so 'tis called the Spirit of God: Rom. 8.11 If the Spirit of him who raised up Jesus from the dead dwell in you, i. e. the Spirit of God, he also shall quicken your mortal bodies. From the Son, and so 'tis called the Spirit of Christ: If any man hath not the Spirit of Christ, Rom. 8.9. i.e. which proceedeth from Christ, he is none of his. In that the holy Spirit is called the Spirit of God, Sic Metaphrastes in Romanos. Siquidem enim est spiritus Dei Patrīs non ipse pater sit, necesse est: & tamen quia Dei Spiritus est, verus Deus fit, oportet. and the Spirit of Christ, is observed these three things. 1. That the Spirit of God is God. 2. That he is a distinct person from the Father and the Son. 3. That he proceedeth from them both. 2. That the Spirit of God is God. Acts 5. Why hath Satan filled thy heart, to lie to the holy Ghost? thou hast not lied unto men but unto God. 2 Sam. 23.2, 3. The Spirit of the Lord spoke by me, and his word was in my tongue. The God of Israel said, the reck of Israel spoke to me. 1 Cor. 12.6. But there are diversities of gifts, but the same God which worketh all in all. 1 John 5.7. For there are three that bear record in heaven, the Father, the Word, and the holy Ghost, and these three are one. 1. Consider the Scripture gives those attributes to the Spirit, which are only proper to God: 1. Eternity, Heb. 9.14. How much more shall the blood of Christ, who through the eternal Spirit, etc. 2. Omniscience, 1 Cor. 2.10. The Spirit searcheth all things. 3. Omnipresence, Psal. 139.7. Whither shall I go from thy Spirit? 4. Almightiness, 2 Tim. 2.7. Isa 11.2. 2. Those works are applied to the Spirit, which are only proper to God. 1. Creation, Gen. 1.2. And the Spirit moved upon the waters, i. e. as a Hen lieth upon her brood, cherishing it, and giving it heat, so did the Spirit of God lie upon that Chaos fomenting and cherishing it, Psal 33.6. By the Word of the Lord were the heavens made, and all the host of them by the breath of his mouth. 3. Adoration and worship is given to the Spirit, Quod si Spiritus non esset persova distincta. sed tantum Dei virtus, utique non possit in invocatione distinctae illius fieri mentio, cum per particulam 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 aequalitèr & distinctè persovae conjunguntur: Si non esset Deus, non esset adorandus. which is only proper to God. We are said to be baptised in the Name of the Father, Son, and of the holy Ghost. And St Paul in his Epistles frequently, The grace of our Lord Jesus Christ, the love of God, and the communion of the holy Ghost be with you all, Amen, 2 Cor. 13.14. Fifthly, We have the end for which the Spirit is given, i. e. That we might know the things which are freely given unto us of God. Without the Spirit we are in the dark, and we know not whither we go. But of this hereafter. Sixthly, We have the adjunct or circumstance put to the things which are given unto us of God, to wit, that they are given freely. That we might know the things which are freely given unto us of God. How God is said to give us the things of salvation freely. God gives, and he gives freely, liberally and bountifully, and expects nothing at our hands but a thankful heart. The things of God are given freely upon a double account: 1. In opposition to merit. 2. In opposition to compulsion and unwillingness. God gives freely in opposition to merit. We deserve nothing at God's hands but hell and destruction. We merit hell, but we merit nothing else. Rom. 6.23. Primarily eternal death is meant there, as appears by the Antithesis between life and death. 1 Cor. 4.7. The wages of sin is death, i.e. all manner of death, the death of afflictions, temporal death, eternal death; but the gift of God is eternal life, through Jesus Christ our Lord. Our common mercies, as life, health, peace, liberty, friends, food for our bodies, and the like, are all from freegrace. What hast thou that thou hast not received, and that thou hast not received freely? If our common mercies be of freegrace (for every step we step is a step of mercy, the breath we breathe forth is God's breath, and not our own, if he taketh away our breath we perish) how much more are spiritual things of freegrace, which are more eminently called the things of God? It is of God's abundant grace and goodness, that by his Spirit we might know our election of God. ☜ God might have elected us unto everlasting life, and we never have known it, until we should have enjoyed it. We might have been left in despair and under a cloud of temptation all our days, had not God freely given unto us the earnest of his Spirit. The Gospel or the glad tidings of peace and reconciliation through Jesus Christ, is of free grace, therefore it is called the Gospel of his grace. Act. 14.3. So likewise Jesus Christ is a most signal fruit and effect of God's free grace and love to mankind. Joh. 3 16. God so loved the world that he gave his only begotten Son, etc. Salvation by Jesus Christ it is of freegrace. Eph. 2.5. By grace ye are saved. All of grace and nothing of debt. All from God's love, and nothing that is in us. God's good pleasure and his freegrace is the impulsive cause of all our mercies, and that we are acquainted with those mysteries which were hid from all eternity, Erigu me gratia divina, sed terret me indignitas mea, atqui si dignus essem, jam non esset gratia, sed merces, si ex operibus, utique non ex gratia: gratia cuim non est gratia ullo modo, nisi sit gratuita omni modo. oie Gethardus. until these last ages. Ascribe all to free grace, and account thyself less than the least of all God's mercies, and unworthy of any smile, or any favour from God's hands. So likewise God gives freely in opposition to compulsion or unwillingness; say the Schoolmen, Gods will is the cause of all things; Eph. 1.11. Who worketh all things according to the counsel of his own will. Nothing moves God to do good to poor sinners, but the riches of his grace in Jesus Christ. Remember this thou poor drooping soul, that complainest by reason of the burden of thy sins, and thinkest that the multitude of thy sins do exceed the greatness of God's mercies. As the most righteous man that ever lived could merit nothing at God's hands, or move God to bestow any thing upon him upon his own account: so neither can the greatest sinner that ever lived hinder God, or his sins put a stop in God's way, that he cannot show him mercy in Jesus Christ, if God be pleased to show him mercy. God showeth mercy because he will show mercy. Rom. 9.15 Exod. 33.19. God is gracious because he will be gracious. As all thy prayers, tears, duties, fastings, watch, can prevail nothing with God, but upon the account of Jesus Christ, so neither can thy unkindness, thy unprofitableness, thy sinfulness, thy disingenuous and foolish carriage with the great God of heaven and earth, keep God from showing thee mercy. God hath his therefores of mercy in himself, and not in the creature, Ezek. 30.18. Therefore will the Lord wait that he may have mercy upon you, and therefore will he be exalted, that he may have compassion upon you. It is a strange therefore that hath no dependence upon the words foregoing, but upon God's infinite mercy: God shows mercy because he delights in mercy. God gives us heaven, because he delights to magnify his glory upon all the vessels of mercy. And when we by our prayers at the Throne of grace, obtain good things at the hand of God, we do not change God; but only those things which God had decreed from all eternity to give us, upon the condition of our ask, though not for our ask, we receive in time when we beg them at God's hands. Ob. How can the things of salvation, as Justification; Adoption, etc. be freely given unto us of God. Baxter in his excellent Book called the Saints Everlasting Rest. seeing Christ Jesus hath purchased them for us? Ans. 1. The purchase of Christ doth not clash with the freeness of the things of God to us. They were dear to Christ, but free to us. If the Father freely gives the Son, and the Son freely pays the debt, and if God freely accepts that way of payment, when he might have required all which Christ hath done, at our hands, and if the Father and the Son, and the holy Ghost do freely offer those things which Christ hath purchased for us upon a cordial acceptation of them, and receiving of them by the hand of faith, than the purchase of Christ doth not hinder but that the things of eternity may be free to us. 2. There are some things which Christ cannot properly be said to purchase for us, but God out of the abundance of his mercy, added as it were an overplus to the death and sufferings of Jesus Christ. Heaven and eternal glory, and the beatifical vision, is not strictly said to be purchased by Christ, but it is a redundancy of the Father's love. The immediate effect of Christ's death, is Justification, a redeeming us from the curse of the Law, and from the wrath of God which was due to our sins. The more remote and consequential effect is heaven and eternal glory. Having explained the words, I come now to raise some Observations from them. From the matter implied, That the teachings of the Spirit are absolutely necessary to know the things of God, Observe this Note, That none can know the things of God, but those who have the teachings of the Spirit upon their hearts. From the words expressed observe, 1. That worldly men, or the men of this world, are led by a worldly spirit. 2. That the spirit of the world is altogether opposite to the Spirit of God. 3. That all that are the people of God have or shall receive the Spirit of God. 4. That the end why they receive the Spirit, is, that they may know the things of God. 5. That all things are given to us freely of God. The Observation which is the subject of my ensuing discourse, is drawn from the thing implied; which is this, That none can know the things of God, but those that have the teachings of the Spirit upon their hearts. In the handling this Observation, I shall show, First, The various acceptation of the word Spirit, and that here is meant the Spirit of God. Secondly, What are the teachings of the Spirit. 1. By way of premonition, that it is a very hard thing to know them. 2. Positively, according to the Scripture phrase, what they be. Here briefly I shall distinguish between the motions, impressions and flashes of the Spirit, and the teachings of the Spirit. Thirdly, How the Spirit teacheth, to wit, 1. By enlightening our understandings. 2. By taking away that enmity which is upon our wills against the things of God. Fourthly, Show what more peculiar things the Spirit teacheth. Fifthly, What manner of teachings they are. Sixthly, Prove the conclusion, That none can know the things of God, but they that have the Spirits teachings. Seventhly, Make application, 1. By way of Information, to show that the greatest part of Christians are void of the teachings of the Spirit upon their hearts. 2. By way of Exhortation, to stir you up to seek after the teachings of the Spirit; and this Exhortation is pressed home upon a threefold account. And a threefold cord is not easily broken. 1. From the excellency of the Spirits teachings, and of that light which comes thereby, above all other teachings, and above all other knowledge whatsoever. 2. Because if the Spirit teacheth thee, it is an evident sign thou art the friend of God. 3. If the Spirit teacheth thee, it is a sign thou art instated into the Covenant of grace. Eighthly, I shall give several signs whereby we may know we are taught of the Spirit. Ninthly, Show how we may distinguish between the more extraordinary teachings of the Spirit upon our hearts, which are peculiar to more eminent Saints, and other teachings. Tenthly, Show the times wherein the Spirits teachings are most manifest. 1. In times of affliction. 2. Near the time of death. Eleventhly, Answer some doubts and questions arising from the Spirits teachings. Twelfthly, Show that it is the duty of every one to walk up to the light which he hath received. The various acceptations of the word Spirit in Scripture. I. The Spirit is put in opposition to the body, Luke 24.39. A spirit hath not flesh and bones, etc. so the gross foul of a beast is called a spirit. The spirit of a man goeth upward, Eccl. 3.21. and the spirit of a beast goeth downward. II. It is applied to any tenuious, nimble or subtle substance. So the wind may be called a Spirit, Job 4. A spirit passed before my face, i.e. a nimble substance resembling the gliding motion of a spirit. So we commonly say the spirits of wines, because of the refinedness of them, III. Any strong impetous or violent inclination, Burroughs upon this place in his Comment upon Hosea. or full purpose to do a thing, may be called a spirit, Hosea 4. 12. The spirit of whoredoms hath caused them to err, i. e. a strong inclination, and full bend of will to go a whoring from God, hath caused them to err. iv For the heart of man, wherein listh the affections, in opposition to the will, and the understanding, and the memory, according to the intellectual part of it: 1 Thes. 5.23. I pray God that your whole soul, spirit and body may be kept blameless till the coming of Jeses Christ. By the soul is meant the understanding and the will, and by the spirit the heart, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. wherein lieth the affections; Rem. 1 9 God whom I serve with my spirit: Luke 8.55. You know not of what spirit ye are of, i. e. of what affections Though some have another interpretation of it, as you may see hereafter. V It is taken, Quo plus materiae, co plus potentiae, quo plus formae, co plus actus. Quo plus potentiae viz. passivae, co plus corruptibilitatis, quo plus actus, co plus substantia. ●ic Philosophi aiuns. 1. For strength and courage. 2. For incorruptibility, Isa. 31.3. Their horses are flesh and not spirit, i.e. subject to corruption, and not abiding, weak, and not strong. What is weaker than flesh? all flesh is as grass. What is stronger than a spirit? spirits are of vast strength and operation. What is more corruptible than flesh? the word flesh notes corruption. What is more abiding than a spirit? a spirit is of a durable nature in respect of itself, though God can suddenly destroy it, Luke 1.17. It is said of Jesus Christ, that he shall come in the Spirit, and in the power of Elias, i. e. in the courage, strength, and power of Elias. The Scripture usually puts one word for the further explanation of the other. VI It is taken for the soul of man: Luke 23.40. Father, into thy hands I commit my spirit. Zech. 13.1. The Lord formeth the spirit of man, i.e. the soul of man; so saith Stephen, Act. 7.59. Lord Jesus receive my spirit. VII. For life; Isa. 57.16. I will not contend for ever, neither will I be always wroth, for the spirit would fail before me, i.e. the life and the souls which I have made. When God comes to contend with sinners for their sins, there is no standing before him, unless Jesus Christ intercedes, and makes up the difference. VIII. We read of a spirit of infirmity: Luke 13.11. There was a woman which had a spirit of infirmity eighteen years, i. e. she had a vehement and a great infirmity lying upon her. IX. We read of a spirit of judgement, and of a spirit of burning: Isa 4.4. When the Lord shall have washed away the filth of the daughters of Zion, by the spirit of judgement, and by the spirit of burning, i. e. by great judgements, and by burning afflictions. That God's judgements are compared to fire, appears by that place in the Prophet Ezekiel, where God saith of wicked men, Ezek. 21.32. I will bring them into the fire, and there I will leave them. You see the sad condition of wicked men, God brings them into the fire of affliction, and never takes them our again. When God comes to deal with wicked men for their sins, when he gins he makes an end. Afflictions shall not rise up the second time, saith the Prophet Nahum. Nah. 1.9. But though God may bring sore judgements upon his own people, and bring them into the fire of affliction, he takes them out of the fire again, and doth not leave them in it, as he doth wicked men, but when he hath accomplished his own work upon them, and they are fit vessels for his use, he takes them out of the fire. It is a sign thou art not reprobate silver, but tried silver, and a true Saint, if thou canst patiently and beleevingly undergo the fiery trial. And though thou mayest be ready for the present to faint under the afflicting hand of God, thinking that God hath forgotten thee, and that he will be gracious to thee no more, yet when God's time is fully come, and thy filth is throughly done away, God will take thee out of the sire, and thou shalt be a glorious Saint in the sight of God. Indeed God's people may be sorely smutted and besmeared with the fire of affliction (as we see by experieuce that fire commonly blacks things before it makes them clear) but yet they shall not be consumed, as the wicked shall be, but shall be delivered. Ps. 34 17. The Lord knoweth how to deliver the righteous out of all their afflictions. Well may God's judgements be compared to fire, to the spirit of judgement, and to the spirit of burning, for these reasons: 1. Fire purifies, it separates the dross from the pure metal: so afflictions they purify the soul. God's children are afflicted, that they might be made partakers of his holiness. Heb. 12.10. Before affliction came upon us, we were unclean, we were worldly, earthly minded, we forgot our God, we were impure, instruments fit only for the devil's service. But by afflictions we are cleansed, we are more spiritual, and have learned to mind heavenly things, more watchful, more industrious to pump out sin as fast as it comes into the soul, and to be more diligent in God's service; afflictions are Gods files, whereby he takes away that rust that defiles the soul. How many hath a fit of sickness, an outward cross in their estates, relations, good names, the missing of their expectations, the unfaithfulness of friends, the deceit that is in the world, or some grief which hath been as a continual dropping upon their souls, as the Stone, Wind-colic, Falling sickness, etc. driven home from the house of their spiritual bondage, and from this mystical Egypt, where there is nothing but pollution, to bethink themselves of the house of their heavenly Father? Before, says David, Psal. 119.67. I was afflicted, I went astray, but now have I learned thy righteous judgements. Affliction it is Gods pruning knife, whereby he lops off the superfluous branches; it is God's Razor, whereby he shaves off the excrescencies of sin; it is God's niter, whereby he cleanseth our defiled garments. They are Gods messengers sent to call us forth our of Sodom, the spiritual Sodom, where there is nothing but filthiness and wallowing in the mire of sin, to prepare our hearts to meet Jesus Christ our Bridegroom in the beavenly Canaan. As the shepherd sets his dog at the sheep to fetch it out of the mire and dirt wherein it is plunged: so afflictions are as it were Gods dogs, to bark and hunt us out of the pollutions of the world, that we may be made meet for the inheritance of the Saints in light. 2. Fire melts some things and consumes others: Afflictions melt the heart of God's people, but they consume the ungodly. Josias heart melted when he heard the Law of the Lord read, 2 King. 22.19. though he did but hear what threaten God had made against the breach of his Law, his heart melted within him. Manasses heart melted under God's offliction. Poverty of spirit comes often from poverty of purse in a child of God. But the afflictions of the wicked they do but perboyl them for hell, they are but heralds of everlasting vengeance, God's pledges that he will never do them good, they do but eat out their spirits, their comforts, their common graces, against the eternal consumption of their spirits, by that ever gnawing worm. 3. Fire it softens some things, and it hardens others: So afflictions they soften the godly, but harden the wicked; the more God afflicted Ahaz. the more he sinned, and the more his heart was hardened, therefore God hath put this brand of infamy upon him never to be wiped off again, 2 Chron. 28.22. This is that King Ahaz. So Pharaches heart was hardened by God's judgements. It is a most dreadful sign God intends to make thee a brand of hell fire, if thy heart is hardened under the afflicting hand of God. How afflictions may be said to harden. Fire it softens the wax, but hardens the clay; afflictions do not harden as considered absolutely in themselves, but accidentally, as they meet with the corruptions of men's wicked hearts. A wicked man is like the Smith's Anvil, the more he is smitten, the more rebellious and stout hearted he is. ☜ Affliction it is so fare from driving a wicked man to God, that it drives him farther from him, making him desperate in his wicked courses, and like Julian the Apostate, when the dart of God's vengeance hath been upon them, they have blasphemed and cursed the holy Name of God. It is a most dreadful thing, and a great aggravation of our condemnation, when we add sin to sin under the afflicting hand of God: As in Ames 4. says the Lord, I have brought such and such judgements upon you, yet have you not returned unto me saith the Lord. But God's people are of another disposition, of a flexible and of a pliable nature, ready to receive whatsoever God shall impart unto them; they consider that God is their Father, and that all their afflictions shall be for their good. That God corrects them but in measure, Enashim, of a weak, sickly, crazy man. and with the rods of a man, and that it is either to make them humble for their sins, or to prevent the breaking forth of the boils of sin for the future. They know that God looks more to the frame of their hearts, and how their spirits are under God's hand, whether perverse and peevish, or patiented and submissive, than at any thing else. Besides, they consider that these afflictions are but to drive them to their Father's house, and when they are sufficiently broken, and sufficiently humbled under his afflicting hand, he will take them up in his arms and kiss them (as a loving mother doth a weak sickly child) and restore unto them the joy of his salvation. There are two extremes we are apt to run into under afflictions, either to despise the chastning of the Lord, Heb. 12.5. or to faint under his displeasure: Wicked men they despise the hand of God, and Christians are ready often to faint, but that Jesus Christ stands by, as he did by that blessed Martyr, and wipes the sweat off from their faces, when they are nigh to swoon, and gives them some comfortable sunshines of his loving presence. X. The Spirit is taken for the motions of the Spirit upon our hearts: 1 Thes. 5.19. Quench not the Spirit, i. e. the motions and impressions of the holy Spirit of God upon thy heart. Believe it Christian for a truth, that though thou canst not blot out the teachings of the Spirit, yet thou mayest shift off and extinguish the motions of the Spirit. Have a care of this great sin, lest by thy impenitency, ingratitude, and wilful rebellion thou stiflest the glowings of the Spirit. Have a care that when God strives with thee thou dost not strive with God again. It is hard for thee to kick against the pricks. Act. 9.5. Have a care thou beeft not found a fighter against God. Saith Stephen of the rebellious Jews, Ye stiffnecked, Act. 7.51. ye do always resist the holy Ghost, i. e. you turn the deaf adder, you stop your ears against the blessed Spirit warning you of that destruction which you have brought upon yourselves in betraying the Lord of life. Wicked men when they quench the Spirit are said to provoke the Spirit. They stir up a holy anger and revenge in the Spirit against their sins. Mark 3.5. As Jesus Christ looked upon the Pharisees with a holy anger, being grieved for the hardness of their hearts, so the Spirit is angry at the hardness of the hearts of stubborn hearted sinners. Eph. 4.30. But you who are the people of God, you grieve the Spirit of God by your unkindness, when ye seek to put out the light of the Spirit within you. Walk in the light while you have the light, for though God will never leave you wholly in the dark, and utterly deprive you of his Spirit, yet he may bring a cloud of temptation over you, which may eclipse the glory of it for a time. I beseech you grieve not the Spirit of God, whereby ye are sealed unto the day of redemption. As you would not be said to kick against the bowels of a bleeding Saviour by your sins, so neither do you kick against the bowels of a most gracious Spirit, or of the Spirit of grace striving with your hearts to the obedience of the truth. As wicked men by their often sinning against the Spirit, do quite sin away the Spirit (for by sinning so often against conviction, they sinne so long till they have no light to sin again, having sinned it all away) so the godly by sinning against the Spirit, do cause it to withdraw its gracious influences for the present. O that troubled consciences mourning under the loss of the comfortable presence of God in Jesus Christ, would consider this; Thou that complainest of the Spirits absence, Hast thou not sinned away the Spirit by quenching its motions, and resisting its impressions? Thou that complainest of the want of assurance, and of the Spirits not witnessing with thy Spirit, Hast thou not sinned away thy assurance by committing some sin, or omitting some duty against the light of the Spirit? What a wicked thing is it that Christians should complain of the Spirit, and murmur against God for the light of his countenance, when God and his Spirit have more reason to complain of them? Christians are said to quench the Spirit two ways: 1. When they withdraw the fuel which should maintain the Spirit: as fire is put out when you withdraw the fuel which should maintain the fire; so you quench the Spirit, when you withdraw the fuel by which the Spirit is cherished. When you will not hear the Word, when you will not pray, when you neglect the Sacraments (the Sacrament often received is a great confirmation of our faith, and a great cherisher of the work of the Spirit upon our hearts) when you will not be much in meditation (the Spirit loves to meet with a solitary soul disburdened of the world, and seeking to have communion with God) when you will not confer and often speak of the things of God, when you forsake the assembling of the Saints together. As one coal kindles another, and one candle enlightens another, so the light of the Spirit in the heart of another, may in time kindle and flame thy heart. 2 Tim. 1.6. When men fail to stir up the gift of God which is in them, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, iguem rineribus absconditum resuscitare. and to excite their graces, and to bring them forth into action, but let them sleep and lie dead and buried in their souls, by these means they subtract the fuel of the Spirit. Christian's should be men of activity, always doing and never idle in the work of the Lord. As the fountain is still purging forth that filth which lies nigh it: so Christians should be still purging forth the remainders of that original corruption which is in them; still resisting temptations, continually treasuring up the whole armour of God against the fiery trial; daily weaning themselves from the world, and preparing to meet Jesus Christ the Bridegroom of their souls. As an idle man is the devil's shop, wherein he forgeth what he pleaseth, so an active Christian is the Spirits shop. If we do what we are able, believe it Christians, the Spirit will not be behind hand, but will further the work of grace in our hearts. It is because we are so backward in our duty, that the Spirit is so backward upon our souls. If thou wouldst have the continual flow in of the Spirit, I beseech thee Christian, for the good and for the comfort of thy soul, for I speak what all true Christians do generally find good, pray more, 1 Thes. 5. pray continually, that is, lose no opportunity, let no time pass when thou oughtest to pray, or when thy occasions require it (for there are many emergencies which fall out, which require this duty, and of some Christians more than others) but be sure to pray, hear the word at all occasions; let not a Sermon pass if you can hear it; let not your souls be famished for want of nourishment. As you would not be said to murder your bodies, so do not you murder your precious souls. Many do quench the Spirit when they do not know it. Some will hear a conscientious Minister a long while, and highly commend him, as most of our profane Esau's do, but when once this Minister shall touch their beloved sins, they presently fall off and hear him no more. Mar. 6.20. Herod heard John gladly for a time, and reform many things, but when once he touched his Herodias, and touched the apple of his eye, he presently distates him, and cuts off his head. What a sad thing is it, that men should shift off such an impression, and wipe off the sweet and heavenly dew? If you will not wait at the pool, you are never like to have the Spirit descend upon you, and if you will not mark the time of the Spirits coming down, and comply with the Spirit at such a time, you are never like to have any feeling effect wrought upon your souls: Have a care therefore of withdrawing the Spirits fuel. 2. When men cast their lusts in the Spirits face, and damp the breathe of the Spirit by their lusts, than they may be said to quench the Spirit. As water quencheth fire, so lusts they quench the Spirit. Lust is the great quench coal of the Spirits motions. As mud and filth doth damp up the course of the water: so every lust doth damn up the course of the Spirit. Yea every particular sin which is committed with a high hand to the reproach of godliness, and to the dishonour of God, quencheth the Spirit for a time. When David had committed those two great evils, murder and adultery in the matter of Vriah, upon the commission of these sins God withdraws his Spirit, and the comfortable presence of his countenance. Hence he complains of brokenness of bones, and of wounds in his soul, Psal. 5.8. My wounds stink and are corrupt, because of. my foolishness. And he prayeth God to uphold him with his free Spirit, ver. 12. Restore unto me the joy of thy salvation, and uphold me with thy free spirit. As the water free-zeth when the sun goeth down, so your, spiries wilk freeze when the spirit goes away from you. What do you think will become of you when the Spirit departs from you? You are in a dull lumpish condition, you cannot pray nor hear the word, nor do any spiritual duty with that rejoicing and freeness of spirit and alacrity of mind, as formerly you did, you are left in a sottish condition for a time. Your spirits will be as heavy as lead, very unapt and contrary to the service of God; and if those sparks of grace which God hath put into your hearts did not enable you to do somewhat more than those who never knew what the saving work of the Spirit meant, you would (as wicked men do when the Spirit leaves them) never seek to God for his Spirit any more. As lusts choke the Word, so they choke the Spirit. Whence is it that many Christians do complain of the Spirits absence, and of the departure of God from them, as Saul did, 1 Sam. 28.15. Woe is me for God is departed from me? Why? As Saul by his disobedience and rebellion caused God to departed from him. so you by your disobedience and resisting of his motions, have caused the Spirit to departed from you. Search your hearts diligently, and see whether there be not some abominable thing which the Spirit would pluck forth of thy heart. Is there not a hankering after thy old beloved lusts? Hast thou not an itching after past delights, when thou wert in the flesh? The Spirit doth not all its work upon a soul at the first work of conversion, but still afterwards is employed to purge out every abominable thing out of thy heart (a child of God after conversion may fall into the same sins he committed before conversion, yea the very same beloved sins) the venomous humour is not throughly purged out in conversion, and the Spirit by its good will would not leave a hoof or any root of bitterness in the heart, but because we are in the body of this flesh, we must grow by degrees, and make progress daily. Search I beseech you and examine your hearts, whether there be not some lust, the Spirit would give a death's wound to, and throughly mortify and extinguish, and you will not yield to the Spirit that you may be mortified. I beseech you Christians to set about it: The Spirit will never be quiet and let you alone, if you belong to God, till this root of hemlock and wormwood be rooted out, i. e. whensoever it comes to thy soul, the controversy shall be about thy lust, whether thou wilt yet leave it or no, whether thou wilt be throughly purged from thy old lees, whether you would have this body of flesh throughly crucified. It will never come with its comforting presence, till thou closest with the Spirit in this great work. Examine your hearts, I believe if the business were throughly sifted, there is some lust at the bottom, some filth that lies below which keeps out the Spirit from coming into thy heart. Sic ut fumus apes, & fater columbot, sic Spiritum sanctum expellit grave oleus peccatum. Basilius, As smoke driveth away bees, and an ill sent the doves: so a noisome lust driveth away the Spirit. As loath as thou art to go into a dungeon full of toads and serpents, and venomous creatures, so loath, yea more loath is the Spirit to come into thy heart, if there be a lust or an abominable thing at the bottom. Yea, I say, the Spirit cannot come into thy heart, while thy lust standeth out against him. There is an opposition in respect of the things themselves; What communion hath light with darkness, God with Belial, the pure Spirit with thy filthy lust? The Spirit may come and knock long enough, and Christ may knock long enough, and to no purpose, if thou art not willing that the Spirit should accomplish the work upon thy heart. I beseech you examine your hearts in this matter. Note this well. A man may live a Professor all his days, and be as conscientious in the ways of God, ☞ as any Christian in the world, and think himself as fair for heaven as the best, and yet at last perish for some unknown lust in his heart, which if he had examined and found out, it might have been mortified, and his soul saved in the day of the Lord Jesus. Besides consider, you have not the influences of the Spirit at command. The Spirit will not blow upon thy heart when thou wouldst have it, but when it lifteth. The Spirit comes down but upon certain times, and those times are uncertain to thee; how therefore doth it behoove thee, Christian, to take the Spirits time, and to join with the work of the Spirit upon thee? Besides, dost thou know how long the Spirit will move upon thy heart; how long the prosperous gales will haft, which if thou hadst sailed along with, would have brought thee to heaven? Dost thou know how long the Spirit will strive with thy heart, crying out, Why sinner, how long shall it be ere Christ shall be thy Lord and Saviour? Beloved Christian, though there be hope as long as the pool is open, and thou art alive, and livest under the Ordinances of grace, that the Spirit may descend again upon thee, yet seeing thou hast sinned so often against the plead of the Spirit, and hast quenched the Spirit so long, who can tell whether ever he will come down in mercy again upon thy soul for ever? For God hath a time in this life to bid his Spirit to let sinners alone, and never to strive with them more, but let them be filthy if they will be filthy. Though this time God hath reserved in his own wisdom secret from men that they should not know it. The black book of reprobation is known only to God, and none may say positively God hath rejected him, unless he is certain he hath sinned against the holy Ghost (as too many weak Christians under desertion are apt to say) and how knowest thou, thou hast sinned the sin against the holy Ghost? if thou hast a desire to repent for thy sins, if thou art willing to receive Jesus Christ for thy Lord and Saviour, never fear it Christian, all is well, thou art in a good condition: yet I beseech thee do not quench the motions of the Spirit upon thy heart. XI. The Spirit is put for a state or a condition, or a calling, as some interpret. We have not received the spirit of bondage; Rom. S. but the spirit of adoption, whereby we cry Abba Father, i. e. not a state or condition of bondage, but a state of adoption: so Ravanellus. Likewise when Christ said to his Disciples, You know not of what spirit ye are of, Luk. 9.55. i. e. of what state, of what calling, of what condition ye are of. It is not suitable to men of your profession, of your coat to be so fiery and so impatient: so Aretius. Yet I rather follow the judgement of a judicious Divine in our days, who in the forementioned place in the Romans, means by spirit, not a state there, but a person, i. e. the third person in the blessed Trinity, very judiciously explaining the words after this manner; Showing that when once the Spirit hath been the Spirit of adoption, that Spirit is never after the spirit of bondage again unto us; this in no ways hindering, but that a child of God after the Spirit of adoption, may have the fears of bondage again, for though the Spirit doth not contradict his testunony, yet he may withdraw his rest money for a time, and leave us in the dark, yea the devil may trouble and affright us, and our own consciences may condemn us. XII. By Spirit may be meant a pretence and opinion of some revelation Dr. Goodwin in his excellent Book called, A child of light walking in darknels. concerning something which a man's own private conceit or imagination inclined him so to think. 2 Thess. 2.1. Be not troubled, neither by spirit nor by word, to think the day of judgement is at hand. By spirit, i. e. if any pretend a revelation that the day of judgement is at hand do not believe him. 1 John 4.1. Try the spirits, i. e. those pretended revelations which men feign, and see whether they are of God or no. Believe not every spirit, because that many false Prophets are gone out into the world. XIII. The Spirit is taken for the graces of the Spirit in you. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Revel. 1. To the seven Spirits of the seven Churches, i. e. to that Spirit which is sevenfold in respect of its graces to the seven Churches. The Spirit of God dwelleth within you; that is, according to some, not the Spirit itself, but the graces of the Spirit. Gal. 5. These are the fruits of the Spirit, love, joy, peace; meekness, temperance, patience, etc. XIV. The Spirit is taken for those unclean lusts which the devil brings along with him in the hearts of those in whom he lodgeth. Matth. 12.45. When the unclean spirit returneth, he bringeth with him seven other spirits worse than the former, i. e. many other filthy lusts more abominable than the former. XV. Consul Pareum in Genesin & na hunc locum interpretatur, viz. Spiritum illic accipi pro vi seu officacia divina. Cap. 1. Geneseos. The Spirit is taken for Divine force and efficacy. Judg. 14.19. And the Spirit of the Lord came upon him, i. e. a Divine force from on high came upon Sampsons' spirit, whereby he set upon the enterprise of killing the Ashkelonites. XVI. The word Spirit signifieth a new quality of holiness created and wrought in all the Elect by the Spirit of God, whereby all the powers and faculties of the soul and body are renewed according to the Image of God, in wisdom, holiness and righteousness, otherwise called the Regenerate part: Rom. 8. The flesh lusteth against the Spirit. XVII. Spirit is taken for the chief and excellent faculties of the soul, called reason and understanding, 1 Cor. 2.11. XVIII. The Spirit is taken for the vigour, and efficacy of the understanding: Be ye renewed in the spirit of your mind. More particularly. First, The Angels are called spirits: 1. Good: Who maketh his Angel's spirits, and his Ministers a flame of fire, Heb. 1. 2. Evil: Mark 5.4. We read of a man possessed with an unclean spirit, and saith Christ, What is thy name? saith the unclean spirit again, My name is Legion, for we are many. A Legion of devils in one poor man. Secondly, By way of eminency God is called a Spirit: John 4.24. God is a Spirit, and they that worship him must worship him in spirit and in truth. God is a Spirit, if you take God essentially for the Deity, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. or personally for the three persons, Father, Son and holy Ghost. Thirdly, More particularly the third Person in the blessed Trinity, distinguished from the Father and the Son, is called a Spirit. Often times in Scripture he is called by the Name of the holy Ghost: Matth. 3.16. I saw the holy Ghost descend upon him like a Dove. Having done with the ambiguity of the word Spirit, I come to show what are the teachings of the Spirit upon the hearts of Believers. In handling of this I shall premise, That it is a very difficult thing to know what the teachings of the Spirit are. As thou canst not tell how the bones grow in her that is with child, or what properly be the influences of the stars, Eccl. 11.5. or how-one spirit communicates its mind to another, or the causes of natural sympathy or antipathy, as thou canst not tell whence the wind cometh, John 3. or whither it goeth, so is every one that is born after the Spirit. It is a very difficult thing to tell what the Spirits teachings are. First, Because they are teachings abstracted from sense. And as the Philosopher says, by how much things are abstracted from sense, the higher they are, and the more difficult to be understood. By how much things are more spiritual, by so much the more hard it is to have a species or an apprehension of them. We can conceive of things but under gross and material apprehensions, because the Phantasm which is transferred from the active intellect to the passive is material. That they be abstracted teachings appears, 1. Because they are immediately upon the soul, and not barely upon the soul, but upon the inmost parts of the soul, Jer. 31. I will write my Law in their inward parts, i. e. in the most retired part of the soul I will write my Law. So likewise the Apostle, Eph. 4.23. Be ye renewed in the spirit of your mind. Not only in your mind, but in the spirit of your mind. What is meant by the spirit of the mind? i. e. in the inmost and most spiritual part of your mind. Grace hath its foundation laid deep in the soul by the Spirit of God (now you know that is the best foundation which is laid the deepest) the Spirit searcheth into the bottom of the soul, and lays the seeds of grace as deep rooted as he can. As God when he wrote the Law, Exod. 32.15. he wrote it upon the two Tables of stone, he wrote within and without upon the Tables, noting thereby that there was no place left for man to add any thing to the perfect Law of God: So the Spirit writes within and without upon the soul. The Spirit in conversion ploughs up the fallow ground of our hearts, and sows the seeds of grace within us, which because of the deepness of the soil, cannot be at first discerned by us, but when the seed gins to grow up, than we see evidently what the Spirit hath been doing. And as Christ said to Peter, Joh. 13.7. What I am doing thou dost not know as yet, but thou shalt understand hereafter, so thou mayest not know for the present what the Spirit means when it teacheth thee. The Spirits foundation is in the dark, but when he comes to rear the building (for believers are a spiritual house of the Spirits own building) and to beautify the work, 1 Pet. 2.5. and to raise it higher and higher, than thou shalt see the teachings of the Spirit. The first lessons of the Spirit may be somewhat mysterious, but when the Spirit shall comment upon them, than nothing will be more plain unto them. 2. Because they are spiritual teachings, and therefore abstracted teachings. They are spiritual teachings, because the Spirit teacheth them. A spirit cannot communicate itself to our spirit, no otherwise then a spirit can. Now as it is a very difficult thing, and much controverted with the Schoolmen, to know how the Angels impart their conceptions, and express their minds one to another, whether intuitiuè by viewing one another, or by something analogcall to speech, which we shall know when we come to heaven: So it is as difficult, if not more difficult, to know how the Spirit communicates itself unto our hearts. Satan is said to put evil things into our hearts. Joh. 13.2. Satan put it into Judas his heart to betray his Master; but what this putting is we cannot tell. So the Spirit of God is said to put the things of God into our hearts (I will put my Law into their hearts) but what this putting is we cannot tell. Jer. 31.33. Secondly, The Spirits teachings are very mysterious, because they are set forth in Scripture by various significant acts, John 16.13. as if the teaching of the Spirit was not one numerical act, Rom. 8.16. but as it were a complex act, including many particular acts in it. Col. 2.2. Job 33.31 Rom. 12.2. Sometimes the guiding act, the witnessing act, the assuring act, the enlightening act, the transforming act, the helping act, 2 Cor. 3.18. and in a word, the teaching act is mentioned in Scripture. The Spirits teaching includes many particular acts, Rom. 8.26. when it teacheth us to be holy, it makes us holy; John 14.26. when it teacheth us assurance, it assures; when it teacheth us what justification is, it justifies; when it teacheth us to pray, it is said to pray along with us. Now multiplicity of acts breeds distraction of mind; especially when the single acts of the Spirit are in themselves mysterious. Who can tell me what the witnessing act of the Spirit is, whereby he witnesseth with our spirits that we are the sons of God? I am certain none can know what it is, but he that feels the effect of it upon his own spirit, and that not at all times, but when he feels the spirit witnessing. Who can tell me what the sealing act of the Spirit is, that seal of the Spirit by which we are sealed unto the day of redemption? This art is better felt than taught. Who can tell me what the assuring act of the Spirit is, when it begets that plerophory, Heb. 10.22. that full assurance of faith? Saith John in his Revelation, Rev. 2.17. No man knoweth what that white stone of absolution is, but he that hath it. He shall have a white stone, and a new name, which none shall know but him that hath it. The acts of the Spirit are better felt than expressed, known only to those that have them, not to others. Having done with the premonition, I come now to show what the teachings of the Spirit be. Herein I shall observe the words of the Covenant made to believers in Jesus Christ under the Gospel, whereof one main part is the teachings of believers by his Spirit. The teachings of the Spirit what they be. The Spirits teachings upon the hearts of believers, are his puttings, writings, printing, engravings the Law of God, and all those things which accompany sallvation, upon their hearts; which engravings, etc. are by a secret way, power and method unknown to us, but only to the Spirit, only we feel the effect of the Spirits teachings upon our hearts. Or, It is the Spirits creating a new light within us, by a secret way unknown unto us at the first, which light in our consciences enkindled by the Spirit, doth in all things correspond and agree with the light of the word, and adds more clearness to it in respect of ourselves, that we might know the things of God. 1. I say the Spirits teachings are his puttings, writings, printing, engravings the Law of God upon our hearts, together with all those things which shall accompany salvation: Heb. 8.8, 9, 10. Behold, saith the Lord, I will make a new Covenant, and this is that Testament that I will make with the house of Israel; After those days, saith the Lord, I will put my Laws into their minds, and in their hearts will I write them, and I will be their God, and they shall be my people. 2 Cor. 3.2, 3. In that you are manifest to be the Epistle of Christ ministered by us, and written not with ink, but with the Spirit of the living God, not in tables of stone, but in the fleshly tables of the heart. Jer. 31.33, 34. But this shall be the Covenant that I will make with the house of Israel, after those days, saith the Lord, I will put my Law in their inward parts, and write it in their hearts, and I will be their God, and they shall be my people; and they shall teach no more every man his neighbour, and every man his brother, saying, Know the Lord, for they shall all know me from the least of them unto the greatest of them, saith the lord You see that the Law must be first written in their hearts by the finger of God, i. e. by the Spirit, before they can know the things of God. Ezek. 36.27 And I will put my Spirit within you, and cause you to walk in my statutes, and ye shall keep my judgements and do them: the Spirit doth not only write upon our hearts the Law of God, but all things which accompany salvation. John 17. And when the Spirit comes he shall teach you all things, and bring all things to your remembrance whatsoever I have said unto you. There is no truth which accompanieth salvation in the Word of God, but the very same is written by the finger of God upon the hearts of beleevets. That even as you see in a seal, when you have put the seal upon the wax, and taken it away again, you shall see it, stamp answering to stamp, character to character, print to print; so it is in the hearts of the faithful, after their hearts are softened, the Spirit of God writes the Law in their hearts. So that there is a Law within answerable to the Law without, i. e. an inward aptness and disposition, whereby a man is inclined to keep the Law in all points, which Law within us is called the Law of the mind, Rom. 7. I see a Law in my members warring against the Law of my mind. The teachings of the Spirit do not only put the things of God into our minds, but ingraff them as natural dispositions in our hearts, yea, the Spirit of God ingravens them. As when letters are engraved in marble, so the teachings of the Spirit engraven the things of God upon our hearts. I call them the writings, the engravings of the things of God upon our hearts, to distinguish the teachings of the Spirit, from the motions, impressions, flashes, illuminations of the pirit. These are but light, superficial, transient works, they reach not to the bottom of the soul, but they float at the top: These impressions are suddenly begun, and suddenly ended. They are but as a flash of lightning, which is no sooner seen but vanisheth. They are but as the morning cloud, and as the early dew, which suddenly pass away; as the wind presently scatters the clouds, and the sun takes away the dew, so all these common works of the Spirit pass away, and melt as the dew before the sun. The best seeming professors that want the teachings of the Spirit, they are but as blazing comets, which appear for a while and presently disappear. Wand'ring stars, Judas 13. to whom is reserved the blackness of darkenss for ever. Heb. 6.5. Psal. 34.8. They do but taste of the goodness of God, and so away. But the teachings of the Spirit make a Christian, not only to taste, but to see the goodness of God. They are permanent upon the soul, never to be blotted out again. They are not as the flash of lightning, but as the noonday, full of brightness and comfort. They are riveted in the soul, and imprinted in it. 2. I say they are the Printings of the things of God upon the hearts of believers. Believers only have the teachings of the Spirit. And ye shall be all taught of God, Joh. 6.45. i. e. all ye who are under the Covenant of grace, and are interested in Jesus Christ, shall have the teachings of the Spirit. Unbelievers may have the motions, the breathe, the quickenings, the flashes, and the illuminations of the Spirit, but not the teachings. 3. I say these printings and writings of the things of God, are done by a secret method unknown to us, yet known to the Spirit. What he 〈…〉 tell, but how he writes we cannot tell; what he prints we can tell, but how he prints we cannot tell. Dan. 5 5. As Belshazzar saw the hand when it wrote, but could not tell what the hand did write; so believers on the other side, they see the writing of the Spirit, but cannot see the hand that writes, nor understand how the Spirit writes; yet we are in a fare better condition than Belshazzar was: For 'tis better to understand the writing, than to know how the hand doth write; what is printed, than how the Spirit prints; as it is fare better to know that we are elected, that we are justified, that we are renewed in the Spirit of our minds, considered in themselves, than to know what Justification and Adoption is, though we may know what Justification is, and that we are justified by the Spirit. 4. Only we see the effect of the Spirits teachings upon our hearts; as a woman may know she is with child, because the infant moves in her belly, so we may know what the Spirit hath been doing on our hearts, by that knowledge, zeal, life, heat, motion, activity and courage we find in our spirits towards God's ways. We hear the clock strike, though we do not see the hand, or the wheels that set it a going; so we may see our hearts echo back to the Spirit, though we do not see the Spirit setting them on work. Ezek. 1.20 As Ezekiel's wheels, wheresoever the Spirit went the wheels went, for the spirits of the living creature was in the wheels: So because the Spirit of God is in us, wheresoever the Spirit carries us we are carried. The Spirit moves and we are moved; the Spirit prays when we pray, the Spirit witnesseth when our spirit witnesseth, the Spirit sets the wheels going and we go. God is of a truth in every Saint, though they cannot see him but in his operations. We know that God is in us of a truth, because we act for God, and have the principle of spiritual life from him. As we know the evil man hath been teaching of us when we see his evil tares, and heresies, and profaneness to spring up: so we may know the Spirit hath been teaching of us when we see the wheat to grow apace. Otherwise: The Spirits teachings is the Spirits creating a new light within us, by a secret way unknown unto us at the first; which light in our consciences, enkindled by the Spirit, doth in all things correspond with the light of the word, and adds more clearness to it in respect of ourselves, that we may know the things of God. 1. A creating a new light within us.] As God in the natural creation, created light out of darkness, so it is in the spiritual creation, when the new man, the infant of grace is born in us. Eph. 5.8. Ye were sometimes darkness, but now are ye light in the Lord. In the Lord] that is, Jesus Christ by his Spirit hath enlightened our minds in the knowledge of him. 2 Cor. 4.6. God who caused the light to shine out of darkness, hath caused the light of the Gospel to shine into our hearts through the face of Jesus Christ. This light wrought by the Spirit it is a creation: for before this light ariseth, before the sun of righteousness ariseth upon us, we were altogether darkenss, we were darkness itself. And as it is said of the people amongst whom the light of the Gospel shined, Isa. 9.2. that the people that sat in darkness, and in the region of the shadow of death, saw marvellous light; so we poor souls, before the Spirit enlightened us, were in utter darkness, as in a dungeon, where there is not the least cranny to let in any light. Judas 13. Blackness of darkness, i. e. in utter darkness, according to the Gospel phrase, Extreme darkness, where there is not the least light, not any light at all We were in a spiritual sense, as it were, in the blackness of darkness, but when the Spirit was pleased to come into our hearts, he created light out of darkness (Non ex materiâ quasi componente, sed quasi ex termino à quo) that is, from darkenss he hath translated us into marvellous light. Yea I may say the Spirits setting up a light in the new creature, is more than a creation, if I may so speak. For it is harder to create a thing out of its opposite in the abstract, out of darkness itself to create light, than to create a thing out of nothing: Excellently therefore did the Spirit of God set down this portion of Scripture, to note unto us the great work of the Spirit in setting up a light in the heart of man. 2 Cor. 4.6 God who caused the light to shine out of darkness. I may say that spiritual darkness which is upon the hearts of unregenerate men, hath a positive entity in it, opposing the light of the Spirit for a time. (The light shined round about, john 1.5. but the darkness comprehended it not.) It is a wilful darkness, and a wilful ignorance; but that first darkness was a nonens, a mere privation, and as soon as ever the light shined, the darkness vanished away. As to make a man that is born blind to see, is a work equivalent to the work of creation, as Christ did. So to remove that blindness which is upon our minds, that natural blindness whereby we are as blind as beetles in the things of God (We have eyes and see not) to remove that blindness, and to make us see, it is a work of creation, and the only work of the Spirit. 2. A new light.] That is a more excellent light, a more transcendent light. More excellent than the light of nature, or the light of conscience, more excellent than the light of Ordinances, the light of means, the light of natural improvements. More excellent than the light of knowledge, or any light whatsoever. The light of the Spirit is the most excellent light. It may truly be said, In thy light, O blessed Spirit, Psal. 36.9. we shall see light, in thy comfort we shall have comfort, by thy teachings only we shall know the things of God. Blessed are they that walk in the light of the Spirit. Revel 5.8. The four beasts, and the twenty four Elders fell down before the Lamb, ●nd they sang a new song, saying, etc. a new song, i. e. a more excellent song; a new light, i. e. a more excellent light. 2. A new light in respect of that abyss of darkness we were in before. A new thing is either a rare thing, or otherwise a thing that never was before. There is no new thing under the sun: Eccl. 1.9. that is, there is nothing but what hath been before. Which light in our consciences enkindled by the Spirit, Conscientia est judicium rationis practicae circa particularia per ratiocinatiovem deductum è principits universalibus contentis in synteresi. Sic Philosophi. Synteresis est habitus sive conservatio printipiorum practicorum. doth in all things correspond with the light of the Word.] The conscience, it is an act of the practical understanding, together with the memory, bearing witness unto God, by accusing or excusing us, accordingly as our deeds be, whether good or evil. Or it is a spark of that primitive light left within us since the fall, whereby in some measure we are able to distinguish between good and evil, and accordingly to judge and censure ourselves. Now because the light of the Spirit, it is a diffusive light, spreading itself over all the powers and faculties of the new creature. And not only a diffusive light, but a persuasive, convincing, directive, light, which dispelleth all the darkness which is upon the soul, such a light which is the life, being, and vigour of the spiritual life. For as knowledge is the life, of the natural soul, so is the light of the Spirit the life of the spiritual soul, giving life, heat and motion unto it; The light was the life of men. Now because the light of the Spirit is a superadded light to that natural light which is within us, the light of conscience, which light consists of the practical part of the understanding, and the memory, both concurring together; therefore though the first work of the Spirit is to enlighten our understandings, yet because our consciences, wherein is the seat of spiritual life, are benumbed and dead, and the Spirits teachings, according to the practical part of them, which is the greatest part of them, reach to the conscience; therefore I place the hearts or consciences, which in Scripture phrase are Synonymicall, the subject of the light of the Spirit. Correspond with the Word.] The light of the Spirit, and the light of the Word do not clash one against another, but in all things do agree in respect of the subject matter, though the light of the Spirit is far the clearer, ut antea. By which light of the Spirit we come to know the things of God. Whereupon David prays, Give me, O Lord, thy good Spirit which may lead me into the Land of uprightness. Now I come to show how the Spirit teacheth. 1. By opening the eyes of the understanding, and making us to see the things of God. A natural man hath eyes, but they be shut, he hath ears, but they be stopped. Now the work of the Spirit is to open our eyes and unstop our ears, that we might hearken to the things of God. We are by nature like the egyptians in the Land of darkness, but when the Spirit hath opened our eyes, we are in the Land of Goshen, in the Land of light. Ephes. 1.17, 18. That the God of our Lord Jesus Christ, the Father of glory, might give unto you the Spirit of Wisdom and revelation, through the acknowledging of him; that the eyes of your understanding may be enlightened, that ye may know what the hope is of his calling, and what the riches of his glorious inheritance in the Saints. 2. By taking away that enmity that is in our wills against the things of God. We hate the things of God by nature. Now the Spirit shows the excellency, the beauty, the lustre, the pleasantness, the profit that is in God. It removes those hard thoughts and evil surmises in our hearts, concerning God and the ways of his worship. It shows us that godliness is profitable for all things, both for the things of this life and of that which is to come. Pro. 3.17. That the ways of wisdom, are ways of pleasantness, and all her paths are peace. Pro. 22.4. That by humility and the fear of the Lord, are riches, honour and life. That there is nothing lost in serving God, and that it is the greatest slavery to do the devil's service. That it is better to work out the peaceable fruit of righteousness, though with much labour and sorrow in the world, than to live in sin though with the greatest worldly prosperity imaginable. That it is better to undergo a light affliction here, which is but for a moment, than to undergo an eternal weight of torment hereafter, and to lose an eternal weight of glory; for if thou canst not endure a short affliction here, how wilt thou endure the fire of hell? Rom. 2. It shows us, that to him that worketh righteousness is peace, honour and life, but tribulation, anguish and sorrow follows every soul that doth evil, both to Jew and Gentile. The Spirit carries us up on the heavenly mount of contemplation, and shows us the riches of God's house, and the treasures of the new Jerusalem, saying, all these things will I give thee, if thou wilt worship God in sincerity and truth. It persuades us of the evil of sin, of the necessity we have of Jesus Christ, of the beauties of holiness, of the wrath of God that hangs over sinners, and that there is nothing but the thread of life (which how soon it may be cut God knows) which keeps them from burning in everlasting fire. It shows the willingness that is in Jesus Christ to receive poor repenting sinners. Him that cometh unto me, I will in no wise cast out. It sets before us the freeness of the promise, Is. 55. Ho every one that thirsteth, let him come and drink of the waters of life freely. Our buying is but receiving, Buy wine and milk without money and without price. That God the Father, and Jesus Christ is more willing to receive us, than we are to come unto him; that God waits to be gracious, Isa. 30.18. as the Prophet Isaiah speaks; that God's mercy rejoiceth against judgement, and that there is nothing but our unwillingness which hinders the marriage union betwixt Christ and our souls: It shows us that the multitude of our sins cannot hinder the effect of God's mercies, Isa. 55.8, 9 for God's thoughts are not as our thoughts, nor his ways as our ways; that the Lord is willing to heal our backslidings, Hos. 14.4. and to love us freely, for his Name sake; that God's bowels yern over us, when he sees us wallowing in our blood; Ezek. 16. that if God were not more merciful to us than we are to ourselves, we had perished long ago in our sins: and that if God sees any thoughts of returning in us, if we would but set our faces Zion ward, Jer. 19.5. if we did but feel after the Lord, Act. 17.27. if he did but see us afar off in a repenting frame of spirit, smiting upon our thighs, jer. 31. as Ephraim did, as the father did the returning prodigal, he would meet us in the way, and fall upon our necks, and kiss us; yea he would bemoan us, as God did repenting Ephraim: Is Ephraim my beloved son? Hos. 11.8. is he not a pleasant child? my repentings are kindled together, and my bowels are turned within me. Saith God, I desire not the death of a sinner, but rather that he should turn from his wicked ways and live. Lam. 3.33 God afflicts not willingly, nor grieves the children of men. If we perish it is not God's fault, but our own, because we are so cruel unto ourselves. Formerly poor creatures could not endure to think of God. Psal. 10.4. God is not in all a wicked man's thoughts, his ways are always grievous. The thoughts of God are troublesome thoughts unto him; his infinite justice, exceeding greatness, his impartial dealing with sinners, when he comes to plead with them for their sins: Saith God, I will not at all acquit the wicked; these are afflicting thoughts to a wicked man: Why? because he thinks that because God is his enemy, all these his attributes shall be employed to his everlasting ruin. It is said likewise of the Gentiles, Rom. 1. that they liked not to retain God in their knowledge. But when the Spirit comes it makes the thoughts of God precious, than the soul can say, as David did, Ps. 94.19. In the multitude of my thoughts thy comforts delight my soul, that is, in the multitude of my distracting, dividing, worldly, perplexing thoughts, the comforts that flow in upon the meditation of thy goodness, and of that propriety which I have in thee, that thou art my portion, my God, my rock, that is higher than I, to which I may continually resort, this doth comfort my spirit. The natural man he counts Christ, and the Word, and the conscientious Minister who deals plainly and powerfully with him his greatest enemies. He cannot endure to see his beloved sin reproved, to hear of his Dallilah, to hear of hell, of the wrath of God, and of the day of judgement, no, it is as bad as death to him to hear of these things. He cannot bear it, that Christ must be his Lord, the Spirit his teacher, the Word his rule, and Gods glory his end; that he must become a new convert, and that he must leave behind him his old companions, his old desires, his old customs, his old principles, his old ends, and his laws, and that he must become another man, altogether new; all old things must be done away, and all things must become new. Heb. 12. Now the Spirit teacheth, john 3. that without holiness he shall never see the face of God. That unless he be born again, he shall never enter into the Kingdom of heaven. That if any man be in Christ he is a new creature: 2 Cor. 5.17. That it is impossible to enter into the new Jerusalem with an unclean heart. Besides the Spirit takes away those objections which are in carnal men's hearts, against the purity of religion. What needs this preciseness, this Pharisaism muchness in duty? to be always praying, and always hearing, and the like: It is a wearisomeness to the flesh, it dulls the spirit, and makes one melancholy, it is more than needs be required. As long as our hearts are upright with God, and we desire to glorify him in all his ways, and we have upright intentions, this is sufficient for heaven, though we are not so much in duty as the pharisaical men are. Now the Spirit setting home the love of Christ upon our hearts, and showing us what he hath done for us, brings us off from this lure, to a perfect resignation of body and soul to his service. Moreover, he showeth us that we must be holy in all manner of conversation: 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. That we must walk exactly, and as much as in us lies, keep every circumstance that is contained in the Law of God. And truly there is not a more certain sign of an upright heart, than to have an universal respect to all the Commandments of God. When out of a conscience to the command of God, we would not commit the least sin, or omit the smallest duty. When the enmity is removed, and the prejudice taken out of our hearts, and all our misgivings and misapprehensions rightly placed, we can easily hearken to the voice of the Spirit. What things more peculiarly the Spirit teacheth. 1. Thou canst not know God aright without the Spirits teachings. Malè vivitur, ubi de Deo non benè creditur. A child of God may know more of God in one Chapter of the Book of God, which is the mind of the Spirit, than all the writings of all the men in the world are able to show forth without this word of God. It is the Spirit alone that can ravish our hearts to the love of God in Jesus Christ. 1. God's love. That can make us see the height, depth, and breadth of God's love unto us. Who would ever have thought that apostates, rebels, enemies, should ever have become the sons of God, heirs, joint-heirs, and coheirs with Jesus Christ, but that the Spirit hath made it clear? Behold with what manner of love hath the Father loved us, that we should be called the sons of God. Philosopher's could tell you that the Being of beings, the first mover, the first Cause of all causes, must be infinite, just, merciful, and the like; but that God through Jesus Christ should find out such a way of reconciliation, that sinners should be called the sons of God, and that they should be one with the Father, and with the Son Jesus Christ, and that they should have communion with him for ever and ever, this only the Spirit teacheth. It is the Spirit only which showeth the most holy nature of God. 2. The holy nature of God. 1 Joh. 1.5. In God is light, and in him there is no darkness. He is holiness itself, therefore saith God, Be ye holy, as I am holy. We are apt to think that God is such an one as ourselves, that he minds not our iniquities, that he walks aloft in the heavens, and cares not for the things which are done upon the earth, but the Spirit hath declared unto us, Hab. 1. That God is of purer eyes than to behold iniquity. Psal. 5. The foolish shall not stand in thy sight, thou hatest all the workers of iniquity. I have read of some Nations, that because they have thought their Gods to have delighted in some vice, therefore they have addicted themselves in the imitation of their Gods to the same vice: Some have thought their Gods delighted in uncleanness, some in drunkenness, others in cruelty, and therefore they have been drunken, unclean, and cruel; but we have learned God otherwise by the mind of the Spirit, that there is no iniquity in the God of Israel: Mercy and truth goes before his face, justice and judgement is the habitation of his Throne. The Spirit alone hath showed us the exact justice of God against every sin, 3. The exact justice of God. that the least sin unrepented of, and not washed away by the blood of Christ, though it be but an evil thought, or an idle word, shall be punished with everlasting destruction. Origin with some others have thought that it could not stand with the mercy of God to punish a sinner everlastingly in hell, and therefore they have jumped in with the Popish purgatory, thinking that after the soul hath been punished so many years in hell fire, it shall be released and set at liberty. But this is contrary to the Spirit of God in many places of Scripture. 2. The mystery of the blessed Trinity. The Spirit only hath showed us the mystery of the blessed and incomprehensible Trinity. That there should be three persons, Father, Son, and holy Ghost, and yet these three but one God. There are three that bear record in heaven, the Father, the Word, and the holy Ghost, and these three are one. All the great Rabbis of the world will never attain this mystery; it is only the Spirit that teacheth it. What Pla. to writes of the blessed Trinity, it is supposed he had it out of Moses his writings or else some other way. This doctrine of the Trinity in Unity, and Unity in Trinity, that there should be three persons and but one God. and one God and yet three persons, that the Father should be God, the Son should be God, and the holy Ghost should be God, it is a doctrine of faith, and not of reason, a doctrine which ought to be believed, because the Spirit hath revealed it, and therefore not to be disputed of. The Schoolmen whose foolish hearts are darkened, have become vain in their imaginations, concerning this transcendent and exceeding great mystery. 3. It is the Spirit alone that teaches us the great mystery of the incarnation of Christ; that there should be two natures, the humane and the Divine united together, and yet but one person, The union or the two natures in Christ, is 〈…〉 by a fiery flaming sword, or rather by the similitude of a branch engrafted into a stock of another tree, where there is not a mixture of the nature of these trees; nor a constitution of a ●hird out of them, but a drawing of one of them into the others subsistence. Dr Field. this is the mystery of mysteries. And without controversy great is the mystery of godliness, God manifested in the flesh; justified in the Spirit, seen of Angels, believed on in the world, and received up into glory, John 1.14 The Word was made flesh and dwelled amongst us, and we saw the glory, as the glory of the only begotten Son, full of grace and truth. Was made flesh.] This destroys the Heresy of the Marcionists, who said that Christ was not made flesh, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Est articulus demonstrativus, notans ipsum verbum fieri carnem, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 indefinite sumitur fine ullo articulo, inde notans eum accepisse totam nostram naturam. and that he was not, form in the womb of the Virgin Mary, but that he passed through the womb of the Virgin, as water passeth through a Conduit. And dwelled amongst us.] 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Greek, Had his Tabernacle among us. There are many other duties which only the Spirit teacheth, as justification by faith alone, the doctrine of the resurrection, of the immortality of the soul, of the happiness of the Saints in heaven, and of the future torments of the wicked in hell. The Schoolmen with their finespun distinctions and critical questions, do rather darken the mind of the Spirit in these ways, than add any further light unto them. Their teachings are like the way of a serpent upon a stone, very slippery and uncertain. 4. The evil nature of fin. The Spirit alone hath showed unto us the evil nature of sin. It condemns an evil look, a malicious thought, Mat. 5. He that looks upon a woman to lust after her, hath committed adultery with her already in his heart. Eph. 5.4. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, urbanitas, apud Spiritum est vitium, upud Aristoteleus est virtus. 1 Thess. 5. He that h●ttih his brother in his heart is a murderer. It condemns jesting and evil speaking. It is to be observed that that very word which Aristotle calls a virtue, the Spirit of God terms a vice. Jesting with Aristotle is a virtue, with the Spirit of God it is a vice. We are commanded to abstain from all appearance of evil. To hate the very garments spotted with the flesh. To resist the first motions and allurements to sin: Rom 7. I had not known sin but by the Law, for I had not known lust, except the Law had said, Thou shalt not covet. Unless the Word of God had told us, and the Spirit of God had set down this for a certain truth, that these motions to sin are sin, we should never have known it or believed it. These first motions were never counted for sins by any of the Heathen Philosophers, or by the more refined wits of the Schoolmen, only the Spirit hath pricked them down for sins. That they are sins, ☜ appears by this, because they tempt a man to sin. If concupiscence were not a sin, it would never tempt a man to sin, for nothing bringeth forth sin formally, but sin. Lust when it conceiveth it bringeth forth sin, and sin when it conceiveth it bringeth forth death. Ob. The wages of sin is death, now if lust were a sin, it would bring forth death, how then is it said that luft when it conceiveth bringeth forth sin, and sin when it conceiveth bringeth forth death? Resp. St James in this place distinguisheth the several sorts of sins. There are some sins consummated and finished, and those bring forth death, but it followeth not that other sins bring not forth death, but that they do not bring forth death to the same degree as those sins do, for there are diversities of torments in hell, and the best place in hell is very lamentable. As he that calls his brother fool is worthy of hell fire, Raca, i.e. a fellow of no worth, from the word Rik ovacuare. yet it will not follow that he that calls his brother Raca is unworthy of it, but that he is not worthy of it in the same degree and measure. Lust it bringeth forth death, but not to the same degree that sin consummated doth. God judgeth the secrets of men's hearts, that secret wickedness which is within us, and reproves it and makes it manifest to our consciences. Rom 2.16 In the day when God shall judge the secrets of men's hearts, according to my Gospel. It is only the Spirit that condemneth heart-wickedness. So saith Peter to Simon Magus, Pray to God that the thought of thy heart might be forgiven thee. The Laws of man do not reach to the conscience, to heart wickedness, to the secret inward abominations to which God and thy own conscience are conscious to. Only the Law of the Spirit doth reprove this heart wickedness. The Spirit of God it condemns hypocrisy, when men will seem religious, and would be counted true Christians, though their hearts run whoring after their base lusts: When like a man at Oars, they will row one way and look another: Pretend for God and for God's cause, when their design is to carry on the interest of the flesh, and of the devil. When they will worship God and speak him fair to his face, and give him a parcel of good words, in a few formal words, and in an external lip-service, when malice and covetousness, and carnal lusts are in their hearts. Matth. 23. How many woes hath Christ denounced against hypocrites! woe to you Scribes and Pharisees hypocrites. Externall worship is sufficient in man's sight, but God requireth the heart and the whole heart: Matth. 22.37. Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart, with all thy soul, with all thy might, and with all thy strength. Hypocrisy is no sin in the world's account, but a criminal fault, a crimson sin in the sight of God. Dost thou think to mock God, and to put him off with shadows in stead of substance, with thy formality in stead of sincerity? Gal. 5. Be not deceived, do not deceive yourselves, and think to put off God with any thing; the heart of man is full of deceit, deceitful above all things and desperately wicked. Why be not deceived, why? I will tell you, for what a man soweth, that shall he reap; if ye sow chaff, you shall reap chaff; if you sow wheat, you shall reap wheat. Hypocrisy is an epidemical sin in this professing age. Consider against this sin, Cor secundum Auagramma est Camera omnipotentis Regis. The heart is the seat of the great King of heaven and earth, the King of Kings, and Lord of Lords. God hath two places wherein he most especially is resident, the highest heaven, and the lowest heart. In heaven he is by his glorious presence: In an humble heart by his gracious presence. 1. That all thy endeavours will be utterly lost, unless thou hast an upright heart; if thou prayest never so much, if thy heart be not perfect with thy God, all thy prayers will do thee no good. As good not at all, as never a whit the better. 2. Consider, that God judgeth a man and esteemeth of him according as his heart is; if that be sincere, thou art a sincere Christian, but if that be rotten, thou art unsavoury in the sight of God. 3. God answereth a man according to what is in his heart, not according to what is in his lips, when he prayeth to him. Thou art a drunkard or a whoremonger, or a covetous wretch, or an extortioner, etc. and thou comest as God's people do, and sittest before him, and prayest unto him: Why God will not answer thee according to thy prayer, for it is but lip-service, but according to the Idol that is in thy heart. Ezek. 14. In stead of pardoning thy sins, he will give thee more liberty to gratify thy lusts. God will answer thee, but it shall be with a curse rather than with a blessing. Sin it is filthiness in the sight of God: Ezek. 36. I will pour clean water upon you, and purge you from all your filthinessesses. Saith God, remove this abominable thing out of my sight which I hate. As it is spoken in reference to Idolatry, so it may be applied to all manner of sins. Remove this abominable thing, to wit, sin, either in general, Jer. 44.4. or this particular sin out of my sight. Rebellion is as the sin of witchcraft. 1 Sam. 15.23. He that sinneth hurteth his own soul. Every sin properly is a destruction to the soul: Isa. 59 2. Your fins have separated between you and your God, and he hath hid his face and will not hear. 2 Cor. 6.15. Sin it defaceth the beauty of the soul, It is a fretting leprosy, which only the blood of Christ can purge away. The deluge which drowned so many sinners, was not able to wash away the least sin. Sin it is the greatest evil, because it is worse than the devil, for it made him to be so. 'Tis worse than hell, that is but opposite to the good of the creature, this of the Creator. And if the greatness of the malady may be judged by the cost and difficulty of the cure, it will easily appear that no evil is so great as this, because nothing could serve for the remedy of it, but the infinite precious blood of Jesus Christ. 'Tis so great an evil, that there can be no greater punishment of i●, than by itself: When God would deal with man as a most desperate enemy, he gives him up to sin. There can be no worse Epithet for it than itself. When the Apostle would speak the worst of it as he could, he calls it by his own name, Rom. 7.13. Sinful sin. Dr. Wilkins in his Discourse concerning the gift of prayer. it is a leprosy which infects the whole man, it is that which makes the inhabitants of the earth to stink and be corrupt in the nostrils of God. It is that which is the greatest evil, because it is opposite to the greatest good, God blessed for ever, and brings the greatest evil upon creatures, the privation of God's glorious presence for ever: 1 Cor. 6.9. Neither fornicators, nor Idolaters, nor adulterers, nor effeminate, nor abusers of themselves with mankind, nor thiefs, nor covetous, nor drunkards, nor reyilers, nor extortioners shall inherit the Kingdom of heaven. The moralist defines sin after this manner, Vitium est quod à mediocritate deflectit, vel in excessu, vel in defectu. Actual sin according to the Schoolmen is thus defined, Peccaium actuale est actus indebito modo circumstantionatus, the circumstances are these, Quis, quid, ubi, quibus auxiliis, cur, quomodo, quando. But the Word of God calls sin 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Sin is the transgression of the Law. Every deviation from the perfect Law of God, in the least punctillo of it, though but in a thought, in a word, or in one particular action, it is a sin. Regula est judex sui & obliqui. And the Law of God, it not only shows what is good, what is right, and what is just, but what is evil, what is unjust, because it shows us all our obliquities and defects from it. 5. None can teach us to understand the Word of God, but the Spirit of God. The Word of God it remains always the same, and it is a clear and a plain way in itself: Till the Spirit removes the scales from our eyes, such scales as fallen from Paul's eyes, we cannot understand the mind of the Spirit. We may prove the Word of God to be the Word of God by reason, for unless we go by reason, we shall never be able to convince an Infidel or a Pagan that the Seriptures are the Word of God. But to make a man understand it, is the work of the Spirit. What is the reason that having been so much versed in the word, we remain so ignorant of the mind of the Spirit? Why, it is because thou art void of the Spirits teachings. The word it is not written upon thy heart by the finger of God, but as fast as it comes in at one car it goes out at another, and the devil comes and steals the word out of thy heart. I tell thee thou mayest have the whole Word of God by heart, and yet fare to seek in the right knowledge of it. Scriptura omnibus accessibilitises, paucissimis penetrabilis. Aug. Act. 8. We read the story of Philio and of the Eunuch; The Eunuch was reading a place of Isaias, He was led as a sheep to the slaughter, and as a lamb before the shearer opened he not his mouth. Philip comes to him and said, Understandest thou what thou readest? said the Eunuch again, How can I? except some man guide me: Then Philip expounded the place unto him. But what set Philip a work to go to the Eunuch? The Spirit said unto Philip, Go near and join thyself to his Chariot. So I may say to a poor man when he reads the Word of God, Understandest thou what thou readest? Dost thou know the mind of the Spirit in that place? and he may answer me, How should I? unless the Spirit teacheth me, or some body whom the Spirit sets a work for that end. Believe it, ☜ When sensual men that have not the Spirit, let them be never so book-learned, or head-learned otherwise, speak of the things of God, they speak as some Geographers writ of other Countries, who never were there themselves to see the situation or the sertility of them, they travel by other men's eyes, and see with other men's light; and what they writ for the most part of it they take up on trust and record, and have but an opinionative knowledge of them, if I may so speak, and mix many errors with little of truth. So Learned men void of the Spirit, the greatest part of their knowledge they have upon trust, and upon the record of men like Augustine, who as he before his conversion said, I believe so, because the Church said so, so they believe so, because the fathers of old said so, or because such and such persons whom they esteem say so, not considering the light of the Spirit, which is greater than the light of reason, or any other light whatsoever. But the spiritual man speaks experimentally what he se●● by the light of the Spirit within him. Every spiritual man can say, and only he can say so, I know what I speak; I believed, therefore have have I spoken. My record is true, because I have the record of the Spirit. What I have heard; seen and felt of the word of life, that I speak, Rom. 9 and 'tis a certain truth, that a godly poor man, let him be unskilful in humane Learning, yet if he hath but that unction of the Spirit that St John speaks of, he is able to discourse of the things of God more savingly, experimentally and powersully than the greatest Clerks and Rulers of the world: 1 Cor. 1.20. Not many mighty, not many wise, not many noble are called, but God hath chosen the base things of the world to confound the honourable, and the weak things of the world to confound the things which are mighty. God did choose for his disciples, not the learned Rabbis of the world, as the Scribes and Pharisees were, but a poor company of Fishermen and Tent-makers, delivered this Book unto us. God called Amos from following the sheep, to go and Prophesy to Amaziab. And this God did to slain the pride of worldly wisdom, showing, that he stood not in need of an arm of flesh to accomplish his design upon the earth, but that by weak and inconsiderable means in themselves, he was able to bring about the greatest designs. What is the reason that the greatest Scholars are most to seek in the things of God, especially in those things which accompany salvation? Why, as Solomon speaks, they leaning to their own understandings, and exalting themselves in the pride of their parts and abilities, do justly cause God to leave them to themselves, and in the dark, because they seek not after the Spirit of God, which is the chief thing to be desired, if they will know the will of God. We usually say, that he that made the Laws can best tell how to interpret them; so the Spirit of God which made the Word of God (for holy men of God spoke as they were inspired by the Spirit) knows best how to explain it. We are to compare spiritual things with spiritual, and the Spirit of God speaking in one place, with the Spirit speaking in another, if we would know the scope and intent of the Word. No man can say Jesus is the Christ, but by the Spirit. Saith Christ to Peter, when he confessed him to be the Christ, Blessed art thou Simon Bar-Jona, for flesh and blood hath not revealed this unto thee, but my Father which is in heaven. Now the Father, as it is clear from Ephes. 3.5. declared this mystery by the Spirit, Which in other ages was not made known unto the sons of men, as it is now revealed unto his holy Prophets and Apostles by his Spirit. As for practical duties, 'tis the Spirit only that inflames the heart, enlightens the mind, breeds compunction, and brings sundry comforts. That teacheth us to despise earthly things, to loath things present, and to seek after things eternal, to fly honours, and to suffer scandals, and to place our hope and confidence in God. That teacheth us that great duty of mortification (If ye through the Spirit do mortify the deeds of the flesh) to subdue our lusts, to overcome the world, to live a life of faith, and not of sense, to endure afflictions, and to resist temptations. The Spirit helpeth us to pray, We know not how to pray as we ought, but the Spirit helpeth our infirmities, by making intercessions for us, with groan which cannot be uttered. He helpeth together with and over-against us: 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, collaborantes adjuvat. The original word imports as when another man sets his shoulder to bear a part with us in the lifting up of any burden. The Spirit of God removes those clogs and weights which be upon our spirits, and putteth life into the Chariot wheels of our souls, by raising up our affections, by stirring up the gift of God that is within us, that we may pray with readiness of mind. And maketh intexcession for us, with groan which cannot be uttered. Not that the holy Spirit is a Mediator of intercessions, that is properly the office of the Son, who is therefore styled, our Advocate, 1 Joh. 2.1. But because the Spirit of God doth stir up our hearts to prayer, and infuse into us holy desires, stirring us up and instructing us in this duty, therefore he is said to intercede for us. The Spirit likewise, by causing us to groan and sigh for our sins, is said to make intercession for us, with groan which cannot be uttered. It is the Spirit alone that must convince us of our sins: When the Spirit shall come be shall convince the world of sin, Joh. 16.8. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, corripio, pervim demonstrationis. of righteausness and judgement. The Spirit convinceth plainly by a demonstration, showing, Thou art the man, as Nathan said to David, and powerfully to the conscience. It is the Spirit that unites us to Jesus Christ, he is the bond of our spiritual union. He that hath not the Spirit of Christ is none of his. It is the Spirit that quickens: The Spirit quickeneth, Joh. 6.63. the Word profiteth nothing. It is the Spirit that sanctifieth, and that regenerates the hearts of believers. 1 John 5.18. He that is born of God sinneth not, i.e. he that is born of the sanctifying Spirit of God sinneth not that great sin against the holy Ghost, which is unpardonable. It is the Spirit that is the true Comforter: Hence he is called by way of eminency, John 16. The Comforter: The earnest of our inheritance, Eph. 1.14. because of his inward testifying act upon our spirits, that we are Gods children. It is the Spirit that driveth out that slavish fear out of our hearts, making us to come with boldness and with confidence to God: Psal. 51. Uphold me with thy free Spirit. It is the Spirit that justifies; 1 Cor. 6.10. But ye are justified in the Name of the Lord Jesus, and by the Spirit of God. It is the Spirit that preserves the faithful from falling away, by his preventing and establishing grace, from that hope that is within them, unto the day of their appearance before Jesus Christ. Phil. 1.6. Being confident of this very thing, that he which hath begun a good work in you, will perform it unto the day of Jesus Christ. What manner of teachings the Spirits teachings are. First, They are infallible teachings: The Spirit teacheth truly without the least error or deceit. He is called the Spirit of truth, because whatever the Spirit teacheth it cannot but be truth: John 14.16. I will pray the Father, and he shall give you another Comforter, which shall abide with you for ever, even the Spirit of truth. The Spirit is said to lead us into all truth: Joh. 16.13. When the Spirit of truth is come, he will guide you into all truth, for he shall not speak of himself, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Dux vobis erit. Dux viae. He shall lead you by the hand, as the Nurse doth a weak sickly child; and be a guide unto you in your way. In the way of truth. but what he hath heara of me that shall he speak, and he shall show you things to come. If truth itself can lie and deceive, than the Spirit may deceive you; but it is impossible that truth itself should deceive. God is not as man that he should lie, or the son of man that he should repent. The Spirit it is God, as I have proved already, and therefore 'tis impossible he should lie, i. e. deceive or fail us in our expectations, when we wait upon him. If we think the Spirit to be God, and take him for our guide, and we acknowledge him for to be our counsellor, it is impossible that the Spirit should deceive us of our expectations. Matth. 24.24. There shall arise false Christ's, and false Prophets, and shall show great signs and wonders, and if it were possible they shall deceive the very elect, if it were possible, but 'tis impossible they should deceive the elect: 1 John 2.20. They have the unction from the holy one, and they shall know all things, i. e. all things that pertain to life and godliness. What is the reason why we believe the Word of God to be true, and as Chrift saith, not the least tittle thereof shall fall till all things shall be accomplished, but only because it hath the stamp of the divine authority of the blessed Spirit. 1 Cor. 2. The Spirit teacheth all things, yea though deep things of God. It is called the Spirit of wisdom: Isa. 11.21. It is prophesied of Christ, That the Spirit of wisdom and understanding, the Spirit of counsel and might, and the Spirit of the fear of the Lord, shall rest upon him. Wisdom itself, it cannot err, it cannot deceive. The Spirit it is the fountain of all wisdom: Isa 40.13. Who hath directed the Spirit of the Lord? and being his counsellor, hath taught him? v. 14. With whom took he counsel, and who instructed him and taught him in the paths of judgement, and taught him knowledge, and shown to him the way of understanding? If wisdom itself, and the fountain of all wisdom teacheth you, you need not fear that you shall be taught amiss. Popes and general Counsels, and all men, yea the best men may be sound liars, and may deceive, and put darkness for light, and light for darkness, and may call good evil, and evil good, and may put truth for error, and error for truth, but it is quite otherwise with the Spirit of truth, which shall lead you into all truth. Quest. Do not the people of God. err some times and fall into error, how then are the Spirits teachings infallible? Ans. 1. As fare as they are taught of the Spirit, they do not err or fall into any heresy: Gal. 5. Heresies are reckoned amongst the fruits of the flesh: These are the fruits of the flesn, envyings, strifes, emulations, heresies; so that errors are not fruits of the Spirit, but fruits of the flesh. A child of God may be led away with an error for a time, Gal. 2.13. As Barnabas was led away by their dissimulation, so a child of God may be led. away. 2. God sometimes out of his justice may permit a child of God to run into ways contrary to the truth, because he did not prise the Word of God as he ought to do, and seek it with his whole heart, that afterwards being recovered out of the snare of the devil, he may more esteem the Word of God than formerly. If a Christian who hath lived in England under the means of grace, by providence should be cast among the Heathen, where there is no knowledge of the true God, but idolatry and false worship set up in place of it, how would he esteem the Ordinances of Christ! So when a gracious soul shall be given up to the delusions of Satan for a time, and afterwards be recovered, certainly he would let go all, ere he would lose this precious jewel of truth. Quest. It is said that the unction of the Spirit teacheth them all things; How can they err therefore? Ans. It is true, that is, there is nothing that belongs to life and salvation, but some time or other shall be revealed to the children of God: The Spirit doth not teach us all the mysteries of God at once, but successively, as we are able to receive them: We are not capable to receive all truths at one time. It is with truth, as it is with light, the light grows by degrees, as the sun ascends higher and higher in the firmament, so the greater is the light, The Spirit teacheth successively. and the more it is dispersed. Truth comes not all at once into the understanding, but first one truth comes in, and then another. The Logicians say, that upon the receiving one absurdity a thousand follow, so one truth makes way for another. Therefore the perfectionists of these times, who think, because they say they have the teachings of the Spirit, they know all things, and that they need not have any body to teach them, they are in a gross mistake, and as the Apostle faith, while they think they know all things, they know nothing as they ought to know. Those that are above the Ordinances are beneath salvation, and those that contemn the ordinary teachings of the Spirit in his Word, and Ministers, are fare to seek in the extraordinary. The Spirit hath babes to nurture, as well as strong Christians, it hath several books to read, to those that are in the lowest form in the School of Christ, and not so high and lofty as to those that are in a higher degree. The former he teacheth the principles of the doctrine of God, the later those mysteries which have been kept secret from the foundation of the world. The former he deals with in a more gentle and tender way, to these he is more rough and more severe. Christ hath his Lambs, as well as his Sheep, and what doth he do with them, Isa. 40.11. He shall feed his flock like a shepherd, he shall gather the lambs with his arm, and carry them in his bosom, and gently lead those that are with young. Christ and his Spirit drives on as Jacob did, Gen. 33.13. My Lord knoweth that the children are tender, and the flocks and herds with young are with me, and if men should drive them overhard one day, all the flock would die; Let my Lord, I pray thee, pass over before his servant, and I will lead on softly according as the cattles that go before me, and the children are able to bear. Christ leads us as we are able to bear, and the Spirit teacheth us as we are able to learn. The light breaks in upon us by little and little, and Christ said unto the Apostles, he had many things to say unto them, but they could not bear them yet; so the Spirit hath many things to teach us, but we are not sufficiently humbled to receive them. Isa. 42.2, 3 As it is said of Christ, so it may be said of his Spirit, He will not break the brnised reed, nor quench the smoking flax, until he bring forth judgement into victory: that is, he will cherish grace and knowledge, though covered over with manifold imperfections, and very small till they shall come to that measure of perfection which is appointed for them. Reply. Doth the Spirit teach successively, though he will teach us all things which pertain to life and godliness? What hindereth but that a child of God may err in many things, and yet the Spirit of God be said to teach him all things? v. g. A Schoolmaster is said to instruct his scholar in all the rudiments of Grammar, yet the scholar may commit solecisms and false concordance; and why? because the Master doth not teach him all the elements at once, but by degrees. So the Spirit, though it teacheth all things which pertain to life and salvation in time; yet because it teacheth by degrees. a child of God may in the mean time fall into error, till the Spirit of God shall give in a further light into his soul, declaring unto him that his tenant is an error. Secondly, They are inward teachings, that is, they reach to the heart. Many times Ministers teach, but 'tis not from the heart to the heart, but from the heart to the head. We may inform your judgements, but we cannot enkindle your affections, and inflame your hearts with an ardent desire, and fervent love of the things delivered unto you. The Spirit makes you not only to know the things of God, but in love with the things of God. A spiritual man can find more sweetness in reading one of the Psalms penned by that sweet Psalmist of Israel Davia, than in reading all the merry books in the world besides. Another man may read the Word of God, but it is only the Spirit that can make us delight in the Law of God, according to the inward man. Another man may hear of the excellency of Jesus Christ, but it is only the spiritual man that esteems him the chiefest of ten thousand, and desires him above all things. When the Spirit teacheth the soul, let it be never so dull of apprehension, let its affections be as cold as a stone to heavenly things, let him be as Epraim, like a silly Dove without a heart, let him be altogether averse from any thing that is good, yet the Spirit shall produce inward heat, life and motion to run in the ways of God, and not to be weary to go on and not faint. The Spirits teachings will make hearts as hard as rocks to flow forth with rivers of living water, they will cause floods to come into the wilderness where no water is. It is unexpressible what are the kindle of love, and melt of heart in a soul towards God, that hath once been touched with this heavenly light of the Spirit from heaven. What is the reason we remain so dull and so cold under such powerful Ordinances, and such plenteous showers of grace? Why, I will tell you, you want the inward teachings of the Spirit upon your hearts. In the Word preached you may have light, but you can have no heat, you may have motion, but you can have no zeal. Where the Spirit is, there is light and heat, you will be burning and shining lights. Thirdly, They are evident teachings. 1 Cor. 2.4. We read of the demonstration of the Spirit; the Spirit when it comes it makes a demonstration from the effect to the cause, because the Spirit worketh in us what it teacheth. The way to faith is by working knowledge in our hearts, and by opening our eyes to see in what a case we are in by nature, and into what a good condition we are instated into by Jesus Christ. Knowledge is put for faith, This is life eternal to know thee, Joh. 17.3. and Jesus Christ whom thou baste sent; that is, to believe on thee and Jesus Christ. We may know we are taught by the Spirit, if we live in the Spirit, if we walk in the Spirit, if we war after the Spirit, and not after the flesh: 2 Cor. 10.4. The weapons of our Warfare are not carnal but spiritual, and mighty, to the throwing down of sin and Satan. The Spirits writing upon the heart is in great letters, not in small, so that he that runs may read it, as it is spoken of the vision in Habakkuk, grace is written in legible characters. The Saints of God generally stand in their own light, By others, I do not understand the world, the wicked world, but the Saints of God. The true Saints are hid to the world. The life of every Saint is hid with Christ in God. But one spiritual Christian may easily discern another, because of that likeness, which each hath one to another, and the conformity both of them have no Jesus Christ their head. that they cannot see those graces in themselves, which to others are very plain and visible. True grace loves to lie hid under the vail of humility, the more it seeks to hid itself, the more it is discovered. The Saints are the Epistle of Christ known and read of all men. The Spirit doth not teach by tips and figures, and by shadows, but it teacheth the very thing, the very substance. We read of the manifestation of the Spirit, 1 Cor. 12.7. But the manifestation of the Spirit is given to every man to profit withal. Ephes. 1.17. So the Spirit of revelation, That the God of our Lord Jesus, and the Father of glory, might give unto you the Spirit of wisdom and revelation in the knowledge of him. The Spirit it is our remembrancer, to bring all things to our remembrance which Christ and his Apostles have spoken unto us in the word: Saith Christ, John 14.26. When the Spirit comes he shall bring all things to your remembrance whatsoever I have spoken unto you, that is, the things of God shall be made so plain unto them, as if they had known them of old, as if they were well versed in them, and the things deeply rooted in their memories. This is quite contrary to those who say the Spirits teachings are full of mysteries, dark and obscure, and hard to be understood: What is this but to make the Spirit of God like the impure spirit the devil? Indeed when Oracles were in use, the devil's answers were very obscure; witness, when Pyrrhus sent to the Oracle to know whether he should overcome the Romans, or the Romans overcome him, the answer was so dubious, that he could not understand either of them, before the sword decided the doubt on the Romans part, Aiote Aeacida, Romanos vincere posse. But the Spirit of God teacheth plainly, and when he speaks, he speaks to the purpose. If the Spirits teachings should be obscure, who should interpret the mind of the Spirit, there is none that can resolve the Spirits meanings, but the Spirit itself; this is the great resolver of all doubts and questions. Wouldst thou be resolved whether thou art a child of God or no, Gal. 4. the Spirit will tell thee. God hath sent the Spirit of his Son crying in our hearts Abba father. The Spirit of God witnesseth with our spirits that we are the children of God. Fourthly, The Spirits teachings are irresistible teachings: Acts 6.10. And they were not able to resist the wisdom and the Spirit by which Stephen spoke, i. e. the writings of God upon Stephen's heart, or the teachings of the Spirit were so evident upon him, that they could not withstand him, or oppose what he said. When the Spirit comes, it shall convince the world of sin, of judgement, and of righteousness: It shall convince, if it doth not convert. It shall either drive thee besides thyself, ☜ and make thee despair of salvation, or to go out of thyself, and to trust in Jesus Christ. There is no opposing the Spirit, when he comes with the prevailings of grace upon thy heart. It is said of Christ, that he spoke as one that had authority, Mat. 7.29. and not as the Scribes: Why? because he spoke by the Spirit: My words, saith he, they are spirit and they are life. Joh. 6.63. Let there be never so much opposition in the heart, never so much prevalency of sin, let the soul be kept never so fast bound and settered with the vanities of the world, with the devices of Satan, and with the deceitfulness of sin. Yea supposing thou wert fast asleep in the midnight of earnall security, yet if the Spirit comes and joggs, as the Angel did Peter, we shall presently awake, Act. 12.7. and the prison doors shall be open, and our fetters shall be knocked off, and we shall be set at liberty. It is our misery, that when God comes to deal with his Spirit for our souls good, the Spirit doth not find us sitting still and quiet, and out of the way to heaven, but posting with all speed in a quite contrary way as fast as we can to hell. We do not only by nature not love God, but we hate God, and prefer sin and the devil before him. Now, when the Spirit comes, supposing we are at the very brink of hell, just dropping in, yet if we hear the voice of the Spirit, that voice which Isaiah speaks of, Isa. 30.12. a voice behind thee saying, This is the way walk in it, we shall return and be as firebrands plucked out of the fire. The Spirit when it comes to write the things of God upon our hearts, it doth not find our souls a rasa tabula, a mere blank, wherein there is nothing written; but the rudiments of the world, of the flesh, and of sin are naturally written upon them, the devil is engravened and portrayed all abroad upon the heart of a wicked man. Now the finger of God can presently blot out this writing, and unteach us whatsoever the flesh, the devil, and the world hath taught us, and write his own characters, as it were, with the juice of an onion, never to be blotted out again. Joh. 5.25. It is said in the Gospel of John, the dead shall hear the voice of the Son of God, and live, that is, those that are dead in sins and trespasses, that are spiritually dead, that have no spiritual life, that do not relish the things of God, that cannot move one foot towards heaven, when the Spirit calls (which is meant by the voice of Christ) like those dry bones which the Prophet Ezekiel speaks of, they shall arise and walk, and live the life of faith, Ezek. 36.27. I will put my Spirit within you, and cause you to walk in my ways to do them. When the Spirit teacheth, Isa. 32.4. the heart of the rash shall understand knowledge, and the tongue of the stammerers shall be ready to speak plainly. No natural impediment, no indisposition can hinder the effects of the Spirit. Fifthly, They are arbitrary teachings. As the wind bloweth where it listeth, Joh. 3.8. so is every one that is born of the Spirit. The Spirit teacheth when it listeth, and where it listeth. The Spirit is a free agent, bound to none, and whatsoever he doth, Matth. 11.25. he doth it freely. I thank thee, O Father, Lord of heaven and earth, because thou hast hid these things frem the wise and prudent, and hast revealed them unto babes, even so Father, for so it seemeth good in thy sight. By the same Spirit is given several gists, but all these worketh that one and the self same Spirit, 1 Cor. 12.11. dividing to every man severally as he will. The Spirit of God, out of a family perhaps it teacheth the Master, and leaveth the servant in darkness; the child, and leaves the father in darkness. And as Christ said in the Gospel of Matthew, Matth. 24.41. there shall be two a grinding in the mill. the one shall be taken and the other left; so say I, in the same seat, at the same time, there be many a hearing of the word together, and the Spirit may come and teach one, and leave all the rest in darkness. What a mercy is it therefore to thee, whosoever thou art, to thee, I say, that art so highly honoured as to have the Spirit to be thy teacher, that the Lord should open thine eyes to see the ugly nature of sin, and the excellency that is in Jesus Christ. Why mightst thou not have been one of the ignorant, profane world? one that never knewest experimentally and savingly, what it is to believe in Jesus Christ? what it is to sit down at Christ's table, and to eat of the feast of fat things which he hath prepared for thee? Why mayst thou not have lived under the dispensations of the old Law, when the Patriarches had but the glimmerings of the Spirit, but that thou shouldst live under the Gospel? And why under the Gospel shouldst thou have a more plentiful measure of the Spirit, than others? but because it is the Spirits pleasure it should be so: Even so Father, for so it seemeth good in thy sight. As Christ said to his Apostles, though in another sense, Mat. 13.16, 17. Blessed are the eyes which see the things which you see, and the ears which hear the things which you hear; so I may say to you that live under the teachings of the Spirit in these Gospel-times, Blessed are the eyes which see the things which you see, and the ears which hear the things which you hear. And as Christ said to the woman that came to him saying, Luke 11.27. Blessed is the womb which bore thee, and the paps which gave thee suck; Nay, saith Christ, rather blessed are they which hear the Word of God, and do it: So say I, Blessed are they that hear the voice of the Spirit speaking in their hearts, and walk up to this voice of the Spirit. Sixthly, They are determinating, fixing and quieting teachings. They fix the soul in the ways of God. They resolve all the doubts and carnal reasonings which are in our hearts, and quite stop the mouth of flesh and blood. When Paul had received the Spirit, how courageous was he in the work of the Lord, he that formerly was mad with fury against the Church of God, how strongly doth he row the other way. As soon as ever Ananias had said, Brother Saul receive thy sight, Act. 9 his eyes were opened, and his heart enlarged in the knowledge of God, he presently goes about his Master's business to win souls over by the evidence of the Spirit, to the obedience of the word: Yea he was ready, not only to be bound for the Lord Jesus, ☞ but to suffer for him. A spiritual man he chooseth and pitcheth upon mature and serious deliberation with himself, being helped by the light of the Spirits teachings, I say he chooseth God for his God, and Christ for his Christ, and the Spirit for his Spirit, and the Word for his rule, and Gods Commandments for his delight. An implicit faith. Many Christians have but an implicit faith for what they believe, some believe the Word of God because they were taught so, and so were instructed by education: others believe so, because it is the general opinion of most men; others because this way seems the best to their corrupt natural reason; others there are, because such a man said so, because they are perhaps engaged to him in Church-society, when they have no ground in their own consciences, why they close with this rather than with that. The devil will have a shrewd combat with this man's faith in the hour of temptation, when he shall come to die. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, efflagitavit The devil hath desired to winnow thee, as he did Peter's faith: He will try thee of what mettle thou art made, whether thou art dross or silver, he will sift thee throughly (and if thou art found wanting, as I am sure thou wilt be found, for this faith hath no foundation) thou shalt be cast forth as chaff out of Christ's floor, to be burned for ever. What is the reason that we drive on so slowly for heaven, why? it is because of the unsetledness of our spirits. We do not walk by fixed principles. Go to this point, whether the Word be the Word of God, were you never under the buffet of Satan for a while concerning this thing) hardly any but some times or other have been under such a cloud of temptation. If you were really fixed upon this principle, that the Scripture is the Word of God, reading what judgements attends sinners in their evil courses, and what happiness follows the Saints, there could not be such a general spirit of profaneness amongst men as there is, and that little care to walk exactly according to the preciseness of the Gospel. The Spirit quiets our minds concerning this doubt, by discovering unto us the majesty, purity and perfection of it. A spiritual man can say, I know whom I have believed, 2 Tim. 1.12. I know what I speak, I know that God is true, and that there is no unrighteousness in him: God is in me of a truth. Besides, have we not Atheistical thoughts of God, like that fool, Psal. 14.1. who said in his heart, there was no God, denying the providence of God? When we see the wicked men of the world prosper, and we ourselves counted the offscouring of it; are we not ready to say like David, 1 Sam. 27.1. I shall one day perish by the hand of Saul? or that we shall fall of everlasting happiness? God hath cast us off for ever, calling the servants of God liars, who speak unto us in the name of the Lord, and to distrust the word of promise, Heb. 13.5. I will never leave thee nor forsake thee, where there are five negatives for the confirmation of it, I will never, never, never, never, never leave thee nor forsake thee. Psal. 73. Now as David when he went into the Sanctuary of God, he was better principleed, and understood their latter end; that God had set them in slippery places, that they might fall and not rise again. So if we would wait till the Spirit comes down upon our hearts, we should have all these carnal reasonings, and these fleshly doubts removed, and we should be settled in the truths of God. When a man is taught by the Spirit, he doth not stand to reason with flesh and blood (shall I do this, or shall I do that, shall I choose heaven, or shall I choose hell, shall I choose sin, or shall I choose grace, shall I choose God, or shall I choose Baal) he doth not stand reasoning the case, Shall I be religious, or shall I not? Shall I trust all upon God's bare promise, or shall I close with the pleasures of sin, which are really present? but he presently renouncing all those carnal reasonings which arise from flesh and blood, presently sets upon the work of the Lord, knowing that his labour shall not be in vain in the Lord. So did Paul. Gal. 1. 15, 16. When the Lord had endued him with his Spirit suitable for his calling whereunto he was called, he stood not to reason with flesh and blood, but presently sets upon his great Master's business, Jesus Christ. The great danger there is in consulting with flesh and blood. This consulting with flesh and blood hinders many a poor soul from a through closing with Jesus Christ. Flesh will say, Do not close with Jesus Christ, do not serve God, you had better take a certainty for an uncertainty, and those present enjoyments here, and live merrily. In consulting with flesh and blood, you consult with the enemy of Jesus Christ, of the Gospel of his grace, and with an enemy to your own souls. Be sure the flesh will decide the controversle on the devil's part against Jesus Christ. Now the Spirit of God determines the matter on Christ's part against the devil, teaching thee the insufficiency of all the creatures to make thee happy, and the true happiness only resides in God, putting thee into the way wherein God is to be found, and preserving thee in the same, that at length thou mayst reap everlasting life. Seventhly, The teachings of the Spirit are consonant to the Word; they agree with the Word of God. As the mind of the Spirit in one place of Scripture agrees with the mind of the Spirit in another, and there is a sweet harmony in the Word of God: So the teachings of the Spirit upon our hearts, they also are correspondent with the word. Saith Paul to the Galatians, Gal. 1.8. If an Angel from heaven should deliver any other doctrine unto you, than what you have received, let him be accursed. And the Apostle by a resumption or ingemination repeats it again; If any man teach any other Gospel unto you than what you have received, let him be accursed: ●. 11, 12. And why? My Doctrine is not of flesh, nor of the will of man, but of God. Note this well ☜ As if the Apostle had said, My word which I have delivered unto you being the Word of God, and seeing I have received it from God, I am certain God will not send a message contrary to his Word, or send an Angel from heaven to infirm and weaken that which I have delivered unto you: So I say, ☜ whosoever thou art that pretendest to revelations and mysteries, and high discoveries from God, if the manifestations you pretend to be to draw you to the promoting of any thing contrary to the Word of God, or to encourage you in the ways of sin, and to carry on the interests of the flesh, it is a lying Spirit, it is not the Spirit of God. I am sure God will not send a message to contradict his own Word, or give in a revelation which shall weaken and destroy that word which his Apostles and Prophets have delivered unto us. I could wish that, the Quakers of our times, who pretend so much to the Spirit, The Quakers are void of the Spirits teachings. and yet walk after the flesh, vilifying and reviling the precious servants of Jesus Christ, their mouths being black with hellish imprecations against the servants of Jesus Christ, would lay this to heart. Certainly they are void of the Spirits teachings upon their hearts, if any people in the world are void, because they are so full of malice against the Word of God, which is the mind of the Spirit, and so impetuously carried by a spirit of envy (An envious person is the very picture of the devil) against those who watch for their souls good, that they may be saved at the great day of account, Isa. 8.11. To the Law and to the testimony, if they harken not to these, it is because there is no light in them. I know the devil can put on samuel's mantle, and he will bring Scripture in his mouth, as well as the best. He brought Scripture to Christ, Mat. 4. but you may easily perceive him by his cloven foot; it is either to tempt thee to sin, as here he did Christ, or to some error and heresy. The devil is God's Ape; The devil is God's Ape. and as God hath his miracles, so he hath his wonders, as appears by the Sorcerers in Egypt, and he will set up his standard by God's standard in this world. If God hath his revelations, the devil will have his; but you may easily difference them by these signs: 1. The devil's revelations are but hidden things. How do men in these times who talk much of the light of the Spirit within them, run all upon Allegories, wresting the Scripture to their own damnation. 1 Cor. 14.32 2. The devil's revelations put men into strange passions and frenzies, Spiritus Prophetarum subjecti sunt Prophetis, ie. nihil 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. sacient, sed decentèr & ntilitèr. Et hoc distinguuntur Prophetae veri à vatibus prophavis, quia illi omnia faciunt quodam furore & ecstafis, alley nautur mentè, & abripiun tur extrà seize, ut saepe seipsos non intelligant, inde ambiguè etiam ludunt, quia incerti sunt de rebus. At veri Prophetae non ita: modestè, & sedatè omnia agunt, spiritum habeut sibi subjectum, ut nihil indecorum admittant idco libemèr cedunt aliis. Arecius The spirits of the prophets are subject to the Prophets, that is, they do nothing disorderly, but with decency and profit. And by this manner are distinguished the true Prophets from the false and profane ones, because they do all things with a certain kind of fury and madness, and are estranged in their minds and snatch besides: hemselves, that many times they do not understand themselves, and speak ambiguously, because they are uncertain of the things themselves: But the true Prophets do not so; they do all things modestly and quietly, h●y have their spirits in subjection, so that they do nothing ancomely, and can willingly give place to others. and I know not what distempers: but the Spirit of God doth not so reveal itself, but teacheth in a mild, gentle, and in a quiet way. 3. After the devil's revelations there follows great disquietness of mind, and little settlement of spirit, but they are left in manifold perplexities, sometimes the light that is within them, as they call it, carrying them to such a place, and sometimes to another, and whatsoever the light bids them do, that they must do. As the evil spirit hurried Christ up and down, setting him upon the pinnacle of the Temple, but the teachings of the Spirit bring peace of conscience and joy in the holy Ghost, which is unspeakable and full of glory, Saith Christ, When the Spirit comes, it shall speak of me, and shall bring all things to your remembrance, Whatsoever I have spoken unto you. Whatsoever Christ speaks, and the Word speaks, the Spirit speaks; but whatsoever the devil speaks he speaks it of himself, and not according to the word, for he was a liar from the beginning, he abode not in the truth, and the truth is not in him. Eighthly, They are effectual powerful transforming teachings. As God by his word in the Creation did create light upon the earth; God said, Let there be light, and there was light; so God by one word from heaven, by his Spirit, can create light in our understandings. As Christ by aword did raise Lazarus out of the grave; so God by one word, by his Spirit, can raise us up from the grave of sin to newness of life. As thou canst not hinder the influences of heaven, nor cause it not to rain when God hath unlocked his store-house of rain, or from keeping the light of the sun from the world, much less canst thou hinder the work of the Spirit upon thy heart, the influences of his Divine working. Prov. 21.1. The Lord tunneth the heart of man as he turneth the Water-brooks. One would think that such a one as Saul, a persecutor, should never have been a Paul, a chosen vessel to bear his Name before the Gentiles. That a Manasseh, who made Jerusalem to swim with blood, should have been a Convert: That a Mary Magdalen, out of whom Christ had cast out seven devils, should become a Saint; but such is the power of the Spirit, that though thou hadst a legion of devils, Christ by his Spirit, which is called the finger of God, as Christ saith, (Luke 11.20 If I by the finger of God cast out devils) he can cast them out, and fill thee with his good Spirit. When Christ comes to a man's house, and saith, This day is salvation come to thy house, as he did to Zacheus, Luk. 19.9. let him be a Publican, he shall give half his goods to the poor, and if he hath wronged any man, he shall make restitution: So when Christ shall come to thy heart by the Spirit, and cry saying, This day is salvation come to thy soul, thou shalt open and become a new creature, be thy former condition what it will. 2 Cor. 3.18. But we all with open face behold, as in a glass, the glory of the Lord, are changed into the same image, from glory to glory, even as by the Spirit of the Lord. Here you may observe this rule, A Rule. That whatsoever is spoken of the word in reference to our spiritual estate it is to be meant of the word as the Spirit goes along with it: Heb. 4.12. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, ad intimos recessus, ad spinae medullam usque penetro. To pierce to the very back bone, as when a beast is chined. But the word of God is quick and powerful, sharper than any twoedged sword, dividing between the joints and the marrow, and is a discerner of the thoughts, and of the intonts of the heart, that is the word in the hand of the Spirit is so, and not otherwise, therefore the word is called, The sword of the Spirit; and the sword of the Spirit which is the Word of God. As the sword cannot cut of itself, but as it is in the hand of a strong, and of a skilful man; so neither can the Word have any effect upon our souls, but so fare forth as 'tis managed by the Spirit. Ninthly, They are quiet and comfortable teachings: 'Tis the Spirit alone that teacheth without noise of words, without confusion of opinions, without ambition of honour, with contention of arguments. 'Tis the Spirit alone that in an instant raiseth up the humble minded. As it is said of Christ, so it may be said of the Spirit, that his voice shall not be heard in the streets. The Spirit hath its gentle gales and blasts of love, it doth not compel men to Jesus Christ, but it invites, persuades, allures them, and brings them over in a loving way. The voice of the Spirit it is a sweet gracious inward voice: It is a soft voice, which will break the hardest rocks: It is a soul-melting voice, which will make a soul dissolve into tears, it is not a thundering voice, but a secret powerful voice, calling us from the world to enjoy communion with God. Amongst the Jews there was a certain revelation called Bathcol, that is, filia vocis, because usually when it thundered they had a Revelation: Therefore the Jews to this day, when it thunders, use to light candles, expecting to hear a voice concerning the Messiah. Agreeable to this is the place of the Psalmist, I answered thee out of the secret place of thunder. And when Christ was in his transfiguration, some said it thundered, others that an Angel spoke unto him: But the Spirit doth not teach in a thundering voice, but in a sweet still voice. And as God was not in the wind, and in the earthquake, and in the fire, but in the sweet still voice; 1 King 19.12. so the Spirit of God, when it teacheth the soul, it is by a sweet and a pleasant voice. Tenthly, They are abiding teachings: 2 Cor. 3.3. Saith Christ, I will send the Comforter to you, and he shall abide with you for ever. Jer. 31.33, 34. I will write my Law in their hearts, and put my fear within them, and they shall never departed from me. 1 Pet 1.23. Being born again, not of corruptible seed, but of incorruptible, of the Word of God which liveth and abideth for ever. As none can blot out the Law of nature written naturally on the heart of man, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Communes notiones. Honest vivendum, neminem laedendum, suum cuique tribuendum for there are certain principles in our hearts, certain general notions common to all men, to wit that God is to be loved and worshipped, that we should live bonestly and reverence our parents, and the like. Therefore the Gentiles when they walked contrary to that natural light which God had put within them, are said to withhold the truth in unrighteousness: Much less canst thou blot out the teachings of the Spirit. The finger of God writes indelible characters. We read of the seal of the Spirit: Eph. 1.13. Now you know a seal is for two things, 1. For confirmation of the Covenant. 2. For perpetuity; as long as the Bond stands sealed it is in force. As long as the Spirit hath been a Spirit of Adoption to us, we need not ever fear that he will be a Spirit of bondage again. As long as we have Gods seal upon our hearts, which stands firm and sure until the day of redemption, we need not fear but that we shall continue steadfast in the faith of Gods elect. Eleventhly, They are uniform teachings, that is in respect of the subject matter, the Spirits teachings are the same, to wit, the things of God, though the Spirit hath not always one and the same way to communicate those things unto our souls. Twelfthly and lastly, The Spirits teachings they are the only teachings. As Peter said to Christ, when Christ asked his Disciples, Joh. 6.68. Will ye also forsake me, Lord whither shall we go, thou hast the words of eternal life? So whither should we go to be taught the mind of God, but to the Spirit in the Name of Jesus Christ, to desire him to instruct us by it. As the men that were sent by the rulers to take Christ, brought word back again, that never man spoke like this man: joh. 7.46. So when once thou hast had the experience of the Spirits teachings upon thy heart, thou wilt say indeed and in truth, Never any taught me so, as the Spirit hath taught me. Now my business is to show unto you That only those that have the Spirits teachings can know the things of God: Which is proved from one place of Scripture, 1 Cor. 2. 14, it is said that the natural man receiveth not the things of the Spirit of God, for they are foolishness unto him. In this place of Scripture you have two parts: First, A plain Proposition, which is this, That the natural man receiveth not the things of God, of the Spirit of God. Secondly, You have the reasons of the Proposition, which are these two: 1. Because they are foolishness unto him. 2. Because they are spiritually discerned. It is said, The natural man perceiveth not the things of the Spirit: The Apostle doth not here speak of Epicures, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. whom Peter 2 Ep. 2. chap. v. 12. calls bruit beasts; but of the great men of this world, excellent for wit, for wisdom, and for moral virtues, as Scipio, Cato, Socrates, Aristides: Those men cannot discern the things of the Spirit. Neither doth he speak there of those who by the just judgement of God are delivered up to Satan, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 opponitur 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, animalis opponitur spirituali. The Schoolmens questions are for the most part idle and curious, as the most of their hypothetical propositions, and the manner of disputations; for oftentimes they dispute ex alienis principiis, out of the grounds of other sciences: they confound Divinity and Philosophy; and the Media which they use oftentimes are impertinent. They trust too much to the testimony of men; they go very rashly many of them, and speak not soberly enough of the great mystery of the Trinity, bringing in Philosophical reasons: whereas these mysteries should rather be adored than searched after. They distinguish were God disting visheth not, being full of vain Philosophy, and needless doctrines. Weems. that seeing, they might not see; who are called men of corrupt minds, reprobate concerning the faith; 2 Tim. 3.8. But by the natural man is understood every man whatsoever, that is not taught and enlightened by the Spirit. As fleshly is opposed to spiritual, so animal or natural is opposed to spiritual: So that whosoever he be, let him have the highest perfections of nature or morality, or common endowments, he is an ignoramus in the things of God, if he be void of the Spirit. Wicked men they count spiritual things foolishness. As the wisdom of the world is foolishness with God, so the wisdom of God is foolishness with the world: 1 Cor. 1.25. Though the foolishness of God is wiser than men, and the weakness of God is stronger than men. So we read of the foolishness of preaching, in the 21 verse of the same Chapter. Wicked men count preaching of the Word of God foolishness, and Religion but a toy, a babble, and as a bugbear to keep us in awe, they cannot savour or relish any spiritual thing. Besides, says the Apostle, they are spiritually discerned. Now wicked men who are void of the Spirit, they have not that Spirit of discerning, which other men have, As a man who hath a vicious humour in his eye, whatsoever he looks upon, it is represented under that humour; as if a man hath the Jaundis in his eyes, all things are presented to his sight under a yellow colour: So wicked men, because they are sensual and have not the Spirit, as Judas speaks; they look upon all things with a carnal eye, and so are not able to discern aright. Many times natural men they judge of things according to their bulk and quantity, they judge of the goodness of a prayer, by the length of it; of faith, by a mere casting of themselves at all adventures upon Jesus Christ for salvation, never seeing whether their hearts are purified by faith or no, Indeed the wicked that have learning may perceive and know those things of the Spirit, but they know them in a carnal manner, not in a spiritual manner; and howbeit they may reform their outward courses, and cut off many acts of sin, and like grace somewhat in their hearts; thus fare, and farther may a carnal man go, being but changed, not renewed. Now they cannot spiritually discern grace, for in regard of spiritual discerning they are in the dark, even as the eyes if they would see without light, the eyesight and the goodness, and the excellency of the ball will not avail to make them see; so the wicked, even the learned'st of them all, they cannot see grace, because they have not the Spirit of discerning light; their learning & their wit, and all their good parts cannot suffice to descry the things of God as they are seen by the godly. They seeing, see not, and hearing they might hear, and not understand. This knowledge of the things of God, this spiritual knowledge, it is called the Unction of the holy Ghost: 1 John 2.20. You have an Unction from the holy One, and you know all things. It is called eyesalve, Rev. 3.18. It is called the opening of the eyes, Psal. 119.18. Open thou mine eyes that I may behold the wondrous things in thy Law. It is called the lightning of the eyes, Psal. 13.3. Lighten my eyes. It is called seeing, Isa. 29.18. And the eyes of the blind shall see out of darkness. Mr. Feuner in his mystery of saving grace. or joined with a true love unto him. They mistake common grace for special grace, and rest satisfied with the common graces of the Spirit, never minding whether they have that prevailing degree of grace to love God and Jesus Christ above all things. They are ready to think themselves the children of God, because they prosper in the world, and have not crosses as other men, because they are quiet in respect of sin, and have no trouble of conscience upon their hearts as other men have. They are apt to conclude that God loves them, and delights in them, because they have sometimes more than ordinary raptures of Spirit, and are sometimes stirred up to prayer and the like; because they have more head-knowledge than many other honest-hearted Christians have. All these false conclusions come from corrupt flesh, because they are not enlightened by the Spirit of God. John 2.11. He that walketh in the dark knoweth not whither he goeth. You are all in the dark unless you have the Spirit. If the people of the world had the eyes of the children of God, they could not but love grace and holiness, and Christ, and the Word, and the Ministers, for the beauty and the excellency that is in them. Then they would say with David, Psal. 84. I had rather be a doorkeeper in the house of my God, than to dwell in the tents of wickedness a thonsand years: Psal. 42.1. As the hart panteth after the water-brooks, so panteth my soul after thee O God; when shall I come and appear before God They would hate sin for that odious nature, and that vileness that is in it, but their eyes are vitiated, and in stead of the Doves eyes of the spouse of Christ, their eyes are bewitched with the things of this world: Gal. 3.1. O ye Galatians, who hath bewitched you! It is a bewitching with the eyes, as the Greek word imports. It is said of Agar, that when she was in the wilderness, and the Lad was ready to die for thirst, that God opened her eyes, and she saw a well of water: So though Jesus Christ that fountain which is open to Judah and Jerusalem for sin and for uncleanness, be daily put before our eyes, yet if God doth not open our eyes, we shall never see it, we shall never taste of the waters of life. What is the reason that David prayed so often, Psal. 119. Open thou mine eyes that I may behold the wondrous things of thy Law: Teach me thy statutes. Make me to understand the way of thy precepts. I am thy servant, give me understanding that I may know thy precepts. Why? Because David knew that he could not understand the things of God, unless he were taught by the Spirit. When the earnall men of the world condemn the children of God for their zeal and constancy in his ways, and for their preciseness in living up to the terms of the Gospel; they may answer them as one did his fellow in another case for looking upon a picture; said his fellow, Why dost thou gaze upon it so long? O saith he, if you did see with my eyes, and had that skill to discern as I have, you would gaze upon it as long too: So if you did see with our light, and had that Spirit of discerning which we have, you would be as eager in the ways of God, as we possibly can be. Wicked men are not able to judge aright of the worth of grace, and of the excellency of the things above as they should do, therefore they prefer Barrabas before Christ, and sin before grace; but the godly on the contrary they cry out with that godly Martyr Lambert; None but Christ, Nothing but grace; Give us grace and Christ and it sufficeth us. Do you think that men that are bewitched, or that are besotted, or that are overcome by the power of luft, or that are drunken by the pleasures of sin, or that have no other light to judge by, but that little spark which is left within them since the fall, which is over-pressed with the corruptions of sin, these men are not fit to be competent judges of the mind of the Spirit. Now all men that have not the teachings of the Spirit, they are either drunken men, drunk with the pleasures of sin: Eph. 4. Be not drunk with wine, but be ye filled with the Spirit: Or drunken with the cares of the world, as Martha was, who was cumbered about so many things, There is a drunkenness wherein Nazarites themselves may be overcome. The very cares of this world, and voluptuous living have a kind of inebriating power with them. The excess of our affections in the pursuit and use of any earthly thing, may be called drunkenness. Dr. Sclater. that she could not have time to attend to the sweet words which dropped forth from Christs-mouth: Or they are drunken with self-love, with self-pride, with self-admiration, with self-applause, and so they lift up themselves before Jesus Christ. The excess and immoderate use of a thing, especially when the thing is unlawful in itself, may be called drunkenness; as the Prophet cries forth, O ye that are drunken, but not with wine, Isa. 29.9. As wise Abigail did not discover the intent of David over night to Nabal, A simile. till the drink was out of his head, and he had slept his sleep, so these swinish men cannot understand the things of God, till the Spirit of God, of swine makes them men, and of men Christians. Many are sottish children, that consider not the Lord, nor the operations of his hands. Isa, 1.3. The Ox knoweth his owner, and the Ass his Master's crib, but Israel doth not know, my people doth not consider. They are benumbed, the devil having seared their consciences with a hot iron. Now for sots and innocents' to know the things of God, it implies a thing impossible to flesh and blood. Indeed according to the things of the world they may be wiser than the children of light, but in respect of heavenly things they are sottish children. Ask them what Regeneration is, and about the new birth, they are as great strangers to it as Nicodemus was. joh. 3.9. Ask them concerning the teachings of the Spirit, and like those in the Acts, Act. 19.2. they will answer you, they never heard of the teachings of the Spirit before. Likewise men that are sensual, who are led by sense and not by faith, who can believe nothing but what they see, and can yield to no truth, but what their blind understandings can reach unto, Arabicum Proverbium, Obstrue quinque fenestras ut luceat domus, & qui sunt in eâ. Shut your five windows, that the house and all that are therein may shine, i. e. Consult not with your senses, with carnal reason, which like Sarah laughs at heavenly promises, and looks only to earthly possibilities: and as the Sun, whose rising discovers the terrestiail globe to our sight, but hides the stars and the celestial. Dr. Stoughton. what they are able to apprehend; these are not able to distinguish between light and darkness. Now the Spirit subjects our sense to reason, and reason to faith, that what before we could not close withal for truth, because it was above our capacity to understand, by the Spirits witnessing with our spirits, we can more certainly and resolvedly comply withal and believe, than with those things we see with our natural eyes. The more we have to do with sense, the less we have to do with God. We find it in natural things, that the more retired our souls are, and the freer from this body of flesh, and the more contracted within itself, the higher it soars in the meditation of heavenly things. Pleasant walks and solitary places where there is no recourse, are fittest for the soul to be busy within itself, by viewing God's goodness, and raising sweet experiences from several creatures, and divers objects of the infinite wisdom, goodness and mercy of God in his providence over the world. St Bernard that spiritual Father, who had sweet Soliloquies between God and his own soul, much delighted in fragrant places, separate from all company, that thereby he might have the more freedom of spirit to have communion with his God. If a soul desires to be guided by the Spirit, let it get from sense as high as it can; lest like Anselm's bird entangled with the bird. lime of the world, the more it flutters to escape, the more it is entangled with the pollutions of it. Those which have only that little spark of light within them since the fall, ☜ which is like the snuff of a candle in a dark lantern, these are to seek in the things of God. They may have as it were an Owl-light, but to have the Sun-light which is promised under the days of the Gospel, that the light of the Moon shall be as the light of the Sun, and the light of the Sun sevenfold, Isa. 30.26. this they cannot have. But when the candle of the Lord which is within us, (For the Spirit of man it is the candle of the Lord,) Pro. 20.27 is enlightened by a further light superadded by the Spirit from the book of providence, from the book of the creatures, from the book of our own hearts, we are able to draw many spiritual conclusions, and are enabled to know the mind of the Spirit in the Word of God. Is it so, Uses. That none can know the things of God, but they that have the teachings of the Spirit? Then First, It shows us this, that blindness lies upon the mind of the greatest part of the world, of the greatest part of Christians, because the greatest part of them are void of the Spirit. That they are so, I shall prove by Scripture, 2 Cor. 3.17. Where the Spirit of the Lord is, there is liberty. There is no inslavery, no thraldom; no bondage, and therefore in Rom. 8. the Spirit of adoption is put in opposition to the spirit of bondage. The Spirit is called a Spirit of liberty in three respects. 1. The Spirit of liberty. Because it hath rescued us from a state of bondage. 2. Because it hath put us into a state of liberty. 3. Because it gives us liberty and freedom of spirit to come with confidence and boldness into the presence of God. Before we have the Spirit we are in bondage, 1. To sin. 2. To the beggarly and slavish rudiments and customs of the world. To sin, and so the Spirit, as it delivers us from the state of bondage, 'tis called a Spirit of holiness, a Spirit of sanctification. His servants we are whom we obey; in the service of God there is perfect freedom, but in the service of the devil there is the greatest slavery: What more slavish than to serve a lust? What greater bondage can there be than to have the devil our Master? When the Spirit of God hath sanctified us and renewed us, than we bear the Image of our heavenly Father, according to that place in John, He that is born of the flesh is flesh, Joh. 3.6. and he that is born of the Spirit is spirit; that is, he that is born of the flesh, bears the image of the flesh; and he that is born of the Spirit, the image of the Spirit. As he that is born of corrupt flesh is corrupt, so he that is born of the holy Spirit of God is holy. Likewise we are delivered from the rudiments of the world, and those superstitious ways wherein the world walketh. How many are there kept in bondage to old customs in the worship of God, to Ceremonies and serving of God after the tradition of their fathers; that stand upon places and outward form, more than the inward and more spiritual part of worship? Some cavil at the Churches, calling them Steeple-houses, and the Pulpit a Tub, and the servants of God Tub-preachers. If the Church of God be a Steeplehouse, what place may we term their private meetings? wherein the subject matter of their discourse is to broach and vent forth new fangled notions, nothing material to the salvation of their souls, and how they may vilify and cast contempt upon the true worship of God, and upon the servants of Jesus Christ. Others put too much upon these places, as if there were an inward holiness in them, as if God would rather hear them there, and answer them for the place sake, rather than at another place. Under the Gospel there is no place more holy than another, for it is not the place that makes the duty holy, as it was under the Law, when the Altar sanctified the gift, and not the gift the Altar; but duties now put a dignity upon the place, and not the place put a dignity upon the duties. So that this place, the Church, while we are praying it may be called the house of prayer, and while we are doing God's work, and God is manifesting himself unto us, it may be called the house of God: As Jacob called the place where he had his vision, The house of God. But yet you must observe this by the way, that under the Gospel-dispensation, there is not so much put upon places, as there was under the Law. God under the former dispensation did more immediately limit his presence to one place, though not always, for God is found of all them that diligently seek him, but his visible presence is more reserved to the Temple, and to his shining forth between the Cherubims, over the Mercy-seat: 2 Chron. 6.20. God is said to put his Name into the Temple, and the Psasmist saith, Psal. 80.1. O thou that shinest forth between the Cherubims, in allusion to Gods manifesting himself over the Mercy-seat! Therefore it was Jeroboams sin which the Prophet Hosea reproves, that he did not only set up Calves to be worshipped instead of the true God, but that he set them up in Dan and Bethel, keeping the people from the place of God's worship, where God had put his Name. Yet under this dispensation the Church it may be called a holy place, as under the old Law many things are called holy in that it is separated and set apart in a public way, in opposition to meeting houses, for the pure worship of God, and a joint calling upon him in his own way. The Spirit likewise puts us into a state of liberty: A state of Sonship it is a state of liberty. Rom. 8.11 Therefore we are said to be translated from the Kingdom of darkness into the glorious liberty of the children of God. If children then heirs, joint heirs with Jesus Christ. Now you know a child when he is under age, he differs nothing from a servant, but is under Governors and Tutors, till he comes to be heir and Lord of all things. A reverend Divine whom I heard occasionally, said that there were four privileges which attend Adoption. 1. Liberty. 2. Right and title. 3. Correction: and 4. Boldness. Now how come we to be the Sons of God, but by the Spirit, the Spirit witnesseth with our spirits that we are the children of God. This spiritual freedom it is not such a freedom as the world dreams of; ☞ it doth not exempt us from the obedience to the Laws either of God or man; The Spirits liberty what it i. it is not a freeing us from obeying the Civil Magistrate; it is not a freeing us from afflictions and crosses in the world: Nay rather it is a sign thou art a child of God, and that thou art instated into this liberty if thou art corrected; God chasteneth every son whom he receiveth. The Spirit likewise gives us freedom and liberty to come with confidence by faith into the presence of God. Eph. 2. For through him we both have access through one spirit unto the Father. By the Spirit we have access by Christ unto God the Father, so that whatsoever prayer you put up to God the Father; What prayer is accepted by God. if it be not a fruit of the Spirit. and tendered up in Christ's Name, it shall never be accepted. God owns nothing but what is his own. Whatsoever is not of the Spirit it is of the flesh, Men may be moved with fait speeches, enticing words, eloquent phrases (as the people of Tyrus and Sidon with Herod's eloquent Oration, Act. 12.21.) but all the eloquence in the world is no more to God, than the lowing of an Ox, or the howling of a Dog, if it come not from the Spirit. Dr. Gouge in his whole Armour of God. and whatsoever is of the flesh it is our own, it comes from us and not from God. A child of God he is partly flesh and partly spirit. Now God the Father for Jesus Christ's sake, in whom they are in Covenant with him he overlooks all the fleshly part, all their infirmities, all the wander and gaddings of spirit in their prayer, and what is the fruit of his own spirit, that he receives and looks upon it as a spiritual prayer in and for the sake of Jesus Christ, and because some of the actings of the Spirit have been seen in it. God severs the light from the smoke when it ascends up into heaven, the light is the Spirits, the smoke is ours. Having the Spirit we must go along with him, pouring forth those desires which he suggesteth unto us: the fire which God would have continually to burn upon his Altar, came out from the Lord: Rev. 9.24. If sacrifices were offered up with any other fire, that fire was counted strange, and the sacrifices no whit acceptable, but abominable to the Lord: the heavenly fire whereby our spiritual sacrifices of prayer must be offered up, is that holy Spirit which cometh out from God: he carrieth the very Image of God; we must therefore give unto God that which is Gods. A child of God upon this ground may come with boldness to the throne of grace, that God will accept his prayer, because it is a fruit of his Spirit. He may wrestle with God and never let him alone till he obtain the blessing, or some gracious answer to his prayer, though not in the same kind he petitioned for. He can say, I am thy child, thou art my father, I am one with thee by thy Spirit, I belong to thy family both in heaven and in earth, I am one of them for whom Christ sweat drops of blood, for I have thy Spirit interceding for me with sighs and groans which cannot be uttered, and therefore Lord I know that thou canst not deny me my petition if it be for my good, and for the glory of thy Name. Now is it so, that where the Spirit of the Lord is there is liberty, is it not too too evident that the greatest part of professing Christians are void of the Spirit: Are they not in bondage to some secret lust? Doth not their speech bewray them? in stead of speaking the language of Canaan, do they not speak the language of Ashdod? In stead of being led by the Spirit of God, are they not led by the spirit of the world? While they talk of the Spirit, do they not walk after the flesh? Have they not the Spirit to talk by, and the world to walk by? Are they not in love with the fashion of the world, and entangled with the rudiments of it? Can they pray in the Spirit? can they sing in the Spirit? can they restore a fallen brother in the evidence of their own spirit? If they can, What means these swarms of lusts in their hearts, of pride, envy, self-love, contempt of their poor weak brethren, and little regard they have to the promoting the work of the Spirit in the hearts of others. These with many others are true notes, that the greatest part of Christians are void of the Spirit. Secondly, Is it so, That none can know the things of God, but they that have the teachings of the Spirit upon their hearts, Then I beseech you to desire God to give you the teachings of his Spirit. Pray earnestly for that wisdom which comes from above that St James speaks of, Jam. 3.17. Which is first pure, then gentle, then easy to be entreated, which is full of good works. If any man lack wisdom let him ask it of God, for he giveth liberally and upbraideth none. He will not upbraid thy ignorance, thy poverty, thy former unwillingness and disrespect, if thou wilt ask it of him. If the Lord blessed Solomon so much for ask wisdom before riches, 1 King. 3.11. honour, life, that the Lord gave him a wise heart, together with riches, honour and life, as an overplus into the bargain, how much more pleasant and welcome will thy petition be to God, if thou askest of him spiritual wisdom, which is not to be compared with the most precious Rubies, or with the finest Gold. If thou wouldst have spiritual wisdom, desire God to give thee the Spirit of wisdom to give thee the grace of unction, as well as the grace of union, that as Jesus Christ had the Spirit of wisdom resting upon him, so thou mayest have likewise. To stir thee up to this main duty, Consider first of all, Fidelis mater utra. que praebet infautulo ubera. Sic Deus pater non solum dedit filium, sed ctiam dedit Spiritum sanctum. Haec duo ubera vino sunt pulchriora. That thou askest nothing but what is agreeable to the will of God: Matth. 7.11. If ye being evil know how to give good things to your children, how much more shall your heavenly Father give the Spirit to them that ask it of him. 2. Thou askest nothing but what Christ hath promised. Saith Christ, when I go away the Comforter shall come unto you: So likewise, I will pray the Father and he shall fend you another Comforter. If Christ who is the Amen of all the promises, Rev. 1.5. who is the true and faithful witness, who is truth itself: Saith he, John 14. I am the way, the truth and the life, who hath sealed the Covenant with his own blood, if he hath promised the Spirit, he will not be worse than his word, if thou ask it of him. 3. Consider that Christ was anointed with the Spirit, and received a more plentiful measure of it for our sakes that we might partake of his fullness, he was filled with the Spirit, that we might partake of the same Spirit with him. Joh. 3.34. Non ad mensuram, i. e sive mensurâ. The Spirit was not given unto him by measure, that we might have a measure of his Spirit. 4 Consider that we are to ask nothing but what we are to expect at God's hand under the Gospel. It is said, that the Spirit was not yet given, because that Christ was not yet glorified; Joh. 7.39. that is, it was not poured forth in that measure and abundance, as it was to be given after Christ's ascension. Now Christ being ascended, and sitting at the right hand of God on high, the Apostles long ago, and the Saints in the primitive times, having had the first-fruits of the Spirit. When the holy Ghost descended in the form of cloven tongues, we also may expect the glean of so plentiful a harvest. Sicut unctio à capite Aaronis in ipsius membra descendebat; sic à Christo capite vigor Spiritus sancti in omnia membra dimanat. As the ointment did run down from Aaron's head to the rest of his members: So from Christ the Head the efficacy of the Spirit flows forth upon all the members. To stir you up to desire the Spirits teachings, consider this, that it is a singular mercy to be taught by the Spirit. Blessed is the soul that heareth the Lord, in or by his Spirit, and that receiveth from his mouth the word of comfort. If the Queen of Sheba, 2 Ch●on. 9.7. after she had made trial of Solomon's wisdom, cried out with admiration, Happy are thy men, and happy are these thy servants that stand continually before thee, and that hear thy wisdom: How much happier are they then that heard the gracious words which proceeded from the mouth of Christ when he was upon the earth, and that have the teachings of the Spirit upon their hearts! All other teachings besides the Spirits teachings will avail nothing. Men may pronounce the words, but they cannot give the Spirit: They may speak marvellous well, but if the Spirit holds its peace, they inflame not the heart. They deliver the letter, but the Spirit opens the sense. They bring forth mysteries, but the Spirit unfolds them: They declare thy Commandments, but the Spirit helps to fulfil them. They show us the way, but the Spirit gives us help to walk in it: They water outwardly, but the Spirit gives fruitfulness: Paul may plant and Apollo may water, but it is God that gives the increase. All other knowledge, if thou hast not the light of the Spirit, will little avail to bring thee any substantial good, or any true or solid comfort. Consider with me in these several particulars the vanity of all other knowledge, compared with the light of the Spirit, that hereby thou mayst be stirred up to seek to God to give the Spirits teachings upon thy heart. 1. All other knowledge it breeds distraction of mind, and pierceth the soul through with many sorrows: Eccl 1.18. He that increaseth wisdom increaseth sorrow, and in much knowledge there is much grief. When a man sees those many defects and fall that are in the world, those corruptions which are in Church and State, those evils that attend this miserable life; sees the utter impossibility to flesh and blood that these things should be amended: For saith Solomon, That which is crooked cannot be made strait, Eccl. 1.15. and that which is wanting cannot be supplied. The best of us fail in many things, and there are many defects in the world which cannot be supplied in this miserable life. When a man that hath his eyes in his head considers this, it cannot but be a grief unto his soul. The more a man knows, the more he seethe his own ignorance, when a fool is proud knowing nothing. He sees that for all his knowledge, he knows nothing in comparison of what may be known, and that in many things he is uncertain, and that he errs in many things; this is a trouble and a vexation to his Spirit. Acts 26.24. Saith Festus to Paul, Much learning hath made thee mad. Too much study it is a wearisomeness to the flesh: And overhasty pursuit of knowledge hath cracked the brains of many men; and when they attained that they sought after, they have been as unquiet and unsettled in their Spirits, as ever they were before; yea they have been much more unquiet; for as we commonly say, what the eye sees not the heart grieves not; so if men were not more knowing than formerly they have been, there would not be those actings of fear, of distrust, of strifes, contentions and emulations, as there are in their spirits. The Poets feign of Promotheus, A Moral. that having stolen fire from heaven, his carckass was bound to the mountain Caucasus, where a Vulture doth continually feed upon his lungs. The Moral of it is good, noting unto us this, that when men seek after that knowledge which will not profit, they do but eat out their spirits with many sorrows. But the light of the Spirit it is full of comfort; Psal. 97. Light is sown for the righteous, and joy for the upright in heart. There is no such comfort like to that which flows in upon a sanctified knowledge of the things of God. 2. A little knowledge with true grace, is better than all the knowledge in the world without the light of the Spirit. If thou didst know the whole Bible by heart, and the say of all the Philosophers, what would it avail thee without charity, and the grace of God. Vanity of vanities, all is vanity, but only to know God, and to love him being known. What would it avail thee to dispute profoundly of the Trinity, if thou be void of humility. It is not knowledge but grace makes a man glorious in the eyes of God. The Kingdom of God it consisteth not in words, but in virtue. The Kingdom of God is within you; it cometh not by observation. If men, religions men, professing Christians, would bestow so much labour in rooting out of vices, and planting of virtues, as they do to move doubts and questions, there would not be so much profaneness in the world, nor so much looseness amongst Professors. 3. Other knowledge puffeth up, but the light of the Spirit it humbleth: The Titles that the Schoolmen had, do evidently show their monstrous pride: one was called Jacobus de Voragine, as though he had eaten up the whole book of God in reading it: another Doctor Scraphicus & Angelicus; another Doctor Subtilis, Doctor Irrefragabilis, venerabilis inceptor, Doctor fundatiffimus, Doctor illuminatus, Doctor resolutum. 1 Cor. 13. Knowledge puffeth up, but charity edifieth. As wind in the head makes a man giddy, so this vain worldly knowledge, it makes a man giddy and unstable in the truth. It is as leaven, A little leaven leaveneth the whole lump; so a little vain knowledge will swell the heart of man that it can hardly contain itself. A vain knowing person he never ascribes to God his parts and abilities, and gives him the increase of his talents, but to himself: As Herod did when he had made an elegant Oration in the Auditory, he is so fare from giving glory to God, that he suffers the people to cry out, It is the voice of a God, and not of a man: So it is usual with Scholars, when they have done a thing whereby they have gained credit; as made an elegant Oration, or done some great thing whereby they have gained some honour, Dr. Goodwin on the variety of thoughts. to be often pondering with themselves the chief things contained in the work, and to revolve in their minds those commendable speeches which have been given them for their pains. As the Cow after it hath said, it useth to chew the cud, so these do as it were chew the cud, by meditating in their minds, with self-applause and self-pride, what glorious things they have accomplished, and what praise they have obtained for them. And as Nabuchadnezzar prided himself in the glory of his outward pomp, Dan. 4.30 saying, Is not this great Babel which I have built? So these pride themselves in the glory of their achievements, Have not I done such a curious piece of business worthy of the name of a Scholar? Pride, ambition and covetousness do sweetly sleep in the hearts of many Scholars. Cyprian. What is the reason that in these later times there shall be such an apostasy from the faith? This is the reason, The true reason of apostasy in these our days. because knowledge shall abound, men shall pride themselves in their parts and abilities, and exalt themselves above the grace of Jesus Christ, and the simplicity of the Gospel, and therefore cause God to give them over to strong delusions, that they should believe lies. Ezek. 28.3. The proud King of Tyrus, he thought himself wiser than Daniel, he thought himself wiser and in a better condition than Adam was in Paradise, yea he did set his heart above God: But the teachings of the Spirit make a man to ascribe all to God, and to say with the Apostle, 1 Cor. 15.10. By the grace of God I am what I am; and his grace which was bestowed upon me, was not in vain: but I laboured more abundantly than they all, yet not I, but the grace of God which was with me. So much sanctified knowledge, so much grace: For though there may be knowledge without grace, so there cannot be grace without knowledge: According to the Apostles phrase, Grow in ●ace, 2 Pet. 3.18. and in the knowledge of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ. So much grace, so much humility; so much carnal knowledge, so much pride; so much pride, so much sin. 4 All other knowledge without the teachings of the Spirit, it doth but furnish a man that he might be a more able instrument for the devil, and to carry on his designs in the world; because only those who have the Spirits teachings upon their hearts, have a sanctified use of their knowledge. What a sad thing is it that God should give men parts and abilities only to be the devil's drudges, and to do his service. When men shall employ their parts against the Kingdom of Christ, against the power of godliness, and against the Saints and servants of God; when men shall fight against God with those very weapons which he put into their hands. The devil knows that these be the fittest men to manage his cause upon the earth, and therefore he chooseth these above all others, as most suitable to his intent and purpose. If the leading party of the times, who are eminent for knowledge, and for a wolvish sanctity, who carry as it were all ●●●ore them wheresoever they come, and are applauded of all men for their excellent parts and endowments, be on his side; and under the cloak of a counterfeit zeal and a pretended holiness, can mask over, and palliate over most abominable corruptions in the sight of God, if this party be on his side, the devil sleeps, as it were, in a whole skin, knowing that he hath able Proctors and agents that can bear a great sway in the world, to sweep down millions of poor souls into hell with the besom of everlasting destruction. What say the Pharisees to the ignorant people when they spoke of Christ; say they, Have any of the rulers believed on him? Have any of the Doctors of the Law, who sit in Moses Chair? Have any of the Sect-Masters? Have any of the Rabbis and of the Gymnosophists believed on him? and those men are wiser than you? Those should know sure how to judge of things better than you, who know not the Law of God, but only as you receive it from their mouths? Who were Paul's enemies but the Epicures and Stoics, and the Philosophers of the world? Act. 17.18. Then certain of the Philosophers of the Epicures and Stoics encountered him, saying, What doth this babbler say? 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Seminiverbius. He seemeth to be a setter forth of strange Gods. Who was Paul's enemy but Tertullus the Orator, when he was to plead for his life? Who were Christ's enemies but the Scribes and Pharisees, when it is said that the common people heard him gladly? Julian was a great Scholar, yet a great Persecutor, and an enemy to Jesus Christ, Learned men are but the devil's factors to trade for him, and to gain proselytes unto his Kingdom. 5. All other knowledge will but aggravate your condemnation, unless thou hast the Spirits teachings, at the day of judgement: Sins against knowledge, are the next sins to the sin against the holy Ghost: Saith David, Lord deliver thy servant from presumptuous sins, Psa. 19.3 so shall I be free from the great transgression. They are sins of a deep dye, scarlet sins, sins of ignorance, and sins against knowledge, are both the same for substance, yet knowledge it adds a scarlet dye unto them. What was Belshazzars fault? Dan. 5 22 That though he did know the failings of his father Nabuchadnezzar, yet he did not humble himself for all this. This is the condemnation that light is come into the world, Joh. 3.19. but men love darkness rather than light, because their deeds are evil. If I had not spoken unto you, John 15.22. saith Christ, you had not had sin, but now you have no cloak for your sin. No sin comparatively in respect of what they now have. You cannot improve your knowledge aright to the glory of God, and to the comfort of your own soul, unless it be sanctified unto you by the Spirit. Knowing persons will have the deepest place in hell fire, and will be more tormented than any other persons whatsoever; for God will enlarge their faculties in hell, and their minds shall be enlightened to discern between good and evil. Christians that live under the light of the Gospel, and have not the light of the Spirit, shall have a very low place, if not the lowest, in hell hereafter. Their condemnation shall be greater. Their condemnation shall be greater than the condemnation of Aristotle, of Pythagoras, and other Heathen Philosophers, because they live under a clearer light the light of the Gospel; yet those shall sink very deep into the bottomless pit. Whatsoever is not done in faith, and proceeds from the Spirit, and is done after a due manner, and to a right end, to the glory of God, is sin, Now all that have not the Spirit of God, let them have never so much carnal knowledge, they can never do any thing out of a principle of faith within, and as a fruit of the Spirit, or to the glory of God, as they ought to do, but merely as reason, or as a common knowledge guides them, and no higher. Many will curse the time that ever they had so much knowledge one day, and that they have been so greedy after it; when to all eternity they shall consider, and have nothing else but to consider how unprofitably and vainly they have lived in respect of that plentiful measure of knowledge God hath given them. 6. Other knowledge will never satisfy your souls. The eye is not satisfied with seeing, nor the ear with bearing. The soul is infinite in its desires, in its aims, and in its intentions. A covetous man is never satisfied with his riches; an ambitious man with his honours; a lustful with his pleasures; an Epicure with his delicious fare; The knowledge of all things besides God, are no more able to satisfy our understanding, than a Peck of Corn is sufficient to fill up all the vast regions that are under the circumference of the highest heaven. You may as soon fill a purse with wisdom, as the soul with vain knowledge. the Scholar with his knowledge, but still the more they they have, the more they continually desire. Hab. 2.5. The soul it enlargeth its desires as ●ell: As hell and the grave is never satisfied, so neither is the soul of man with any created excellency whatsoever. We all desire knowledge naturally, because knowledge it is the perfection of a rational soul: What is the chiefest happiness of a Christian, and the highest perfection that the soul can attain unto, but to know God aright, and to rejoice in that knowledge for ever and ever? Eves affectation of knowing both good and evil; and to be like God in knowledge, was the cause of the fall of mankind. The soul it hath a large extent, and is never satisfied with the knowledge of any thing, unless it layeth hold of the most infinite God, who is alone able to replenish the same, without the knowledge of whom we understand nothing, but are compared to the beasts which perish. 7. All other knowledge it is subservient to the Spirits teachings, and to that spiritual wisdom which flows from the Spirit. It is subordinate and inferior to it: John 17.3. This is eternal life to know thee, and Jesus Christ whom thou hast sent. Other knowledge it may serve us about the inferior works of Christianity, how to live justly, soberly, honestly, to carry ourselves prudently in the eyes of the world, and to do many outward good works of Religion; but to make us to approve our hearts to God, to believe on Jesus Christ, to deny ourselves, to take up Christ's Cross daily, and to follow him, this only the teachings of the Spirit can help us to do. It is one thing to be a good man, and another thing to be a good Christian. Moral men who have nothing but tivility in them, and a discreet carriage to carry all things squarely along in the world, may be called good men, who wrong no body, and live honestly and demurely, and are good for the benefit of the Commonwealth, either in a civil, or in an Ecclesiastical way, knowing how to direct all things for the best advantage both to themselves and others: These may be called good men. But good Christians, servants of Jesus Christ, the called one's of God the Father, are only those who are the children of light, and have the light of the Spirit residing in them. The Arts and the Sciences may serve as the Gibeonites did about the Temple, to perform all the inferiors works of Religion, as fare as sense and reason may be a competent judge; but at the service of the Altar the principail thing is the light of the Spirit. Logic shows the way of defining and dividing, and of demonstrating the truth, or the absurdity of a thing. Ethics further us in the illustration of moral virtues. Metaphysics help us in explaining the terms of art, which we use in setting forth the nature of things; and being the highest and the chiefest Science how to draw conclusions from inferior objects in subordination to the highest, and to reduce all inferior things to the first cause. How to discourse of God, of the Angels, of the soul, of the Attributes, of the beings of things in a Scholastical way. To know the first principles of things, with several composed affections which arise from thence; and so to find out principles and subjects for inferior Sciences. But what is all this to the knowledge of God in Jesus Christ, to the doctrine of humiliation, of examining our own hearts, to the great doctrine of morrification, and of the Spirits in-being and dwelling in us, to the comforting of distressed consciences, to the edifying of the Church of Jesus Christ, and to the purifying of our hearts from that inbred corruption that is within us, to the renewing of the Spirit of our minds to the obedience of the truth. An humble knowledge of ourselves is a more secure way to God, than a searching after critical things; and of all knowledge, the knowledge of God and our own consciences is the best of all. 8. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Basilius Christianae religionis finis ac perfecntio, non est nuda 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, sed 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Qui humilitatem, castitatem, mansuetudinem, temperantiam, charitatem non a●at, etiam Christum non amat, quia Christi vita nihil aliud erat, quam humilitas, castitas mansuetudo temperantia, charitas. Gerhardus. All other knowledge it makes a man either a good moral man, or a good Mathematician, or a good Grammarian, or a good Linguist, or a good Statesman, or a good Merchant and the like: But the teachings of the Spirit make a man a good Christian: Which of these do you think is the best? To be a good Mathematician, or a good Christian: A good Christian shall be saved, but a good Mathematician may be damned. It is better to be a good scholar in Christ's School, and to learn apace what the Spirit teacheth us, and daily to grow in grace, and in the knowledge of Jesus Christ, to be like him in humility, meekness, patience, contentment, charity, then to grow apace in humane knowledge, neglecting that knowledge which is for the good of their souls. Other knowledge makes a man eminent but for one thing; Aliquis in singulis nullus in omnibus, but the knowledge that comes from above makes a man eminent in all things, in all companies, upon all occasions whatsoever he sets about. The righteous man is more excellent than his neighbour; let him be never so rich, Pro. 12.26 never so wise, never so honourable, never so mighty, never so knowing otherwise; let him be what he will be, a righteous person that is acquainted with God, and with Jesus Christ, is more excellent than him, if he hath no more but a mere sceptical scholastic knowledge in his head. The light of the Spirit it enlightens the whole soul. As the light of a candle presently diffuseth itself over the whole room, so this light spreads itself over the whole man. 9 All other knowledge it is but vanity and vexation of spirit. Solomon who is said to know every herb from the Cedar of Lebanon to the Thistle that groweth by the wall, whose heart was so filled with wisdom, that there was none like him before, or ever shall be after him; who wrote abundance of Proverbs, and had the faculty of deciding controversies, and resolving hard questions, whose heart God had endued with wisdom exceedingly, yet this Solomon writes this Motto upon all things, All is vanity. Socrates who was the wisest man in the world, according as the Oracle pronounced of him, yet what doth he say of himself, Hoc unum scio, quod nihil scio, I know this one thing, that I know nothing: Nothing in comparison of what the Saints know, and nothing in respect of that true substantial wisdom which will profit me at the last day. Saith true wisdom, Pro. 8.21. I make him that loveth me to inherit substance. By wisdom we are to understand either Jesus Christ, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Jescht, Substantia realitas. who is the substantial and eternal wisdom of God the Father, or complexly, Christ Jesus, and that spiritual wisdom which flows from Christ by his Spirit. Substance] Jesch, substantia, a substantial thing. By substance we are not to understand riches, as some understand, for in common talk a rich man we commonly say is a substantial man, but reality and the truth of a thing. By this phrase, I make him that loveth me to inkerit substance, is meant, reality. Spiritual wisdom is a real thing, it gives a real reward to him that loveth her. Spiritual wisdom is compared to most solid things, to rubies, to the most precious rubies, and to the finest gold. The word which signifies substance is put for wisdom; Mic. 6.9. A man of wisdom shall see thy Name. Hebr. A substantial man. Shall see thy name, i.e. that he will reverence, fear, love and adore thy Name. Words of sense commonly import their effects with them All other knowledge it is vanity when you have it, and vexation when you cannot attain it: It will do you no good at the day of judgement. God at the day of judgement will not ask you what you know, but what you have done, how you have lived, and whether you have walked up to that knowledge which God hath given you. By all your knowledge you cannot supplant one vice, you cannot implant one grace, without the sanctifying Spirit of God. All other knowledge it is but folly in the sight of God. The wisdom of this world it is foolishness with God: ☜ It is folly because it fails in obtaining the chiefest good, and the last end. That is the best wisdom which makes a man provident, and furnisheth him with means to attain the highest end. There is no wisdom but spiritual wisdom, where by we shall ever come to have communion with God, who is the best object, and the chiefest good, the first cause and the last end. If it were so, why did not Socrates, Aristotle, Pythagoras, with many other knowing men in the world, attain everlasting happiness which they are deprived of, unless God out of his infinite mercy, by a secret way unknown unto us, receive some of the best of them into his mercy. For my part I know no other way to salvation but by Jesus Christ; to know him in his death and sufferings, and to be made partakers of his resurrection, and to be united unto him by a lively faith on our part, and by the Spirit on Christ's part, and to worship the true God being rightly known by us according to that way and method he hath delivered unto us in his Word. 10. Multi propter arbo rem scientiae, amittunt arborem vitae. August. All other knowledge it rather hinders, than promotes the salvation of men: It puts a rub in their way to heaven. They cannot submit to the plainness of the word, to the foolishness of preaching, to the wisdom of God. Saith the Apostle, Many for the tree of knowledge do lose the tree of life. The World by wisdom knew not God, that is, by all their wisdom they could not attain to a right knowledge of him, neither did they care for knowing of him. The Gentiles did not like to retain God in their thoughts. Multum ubique scientiae, conscientiae parum. There is a great deal of knowledge in the world, but little of conscience. In denying the wisdom of God they go about to establish their own wisdom which is folly in the sight of God. The Gymnosophists of the world cannot away with this to hear that they must be taught by the Spirit. And truly without the Spirit they are but bats in understanding, knowing nothing as they ought to do. They make a mock of the Spirit of God. What do you tell us of the Spirit? you spiritual men see you to it, that you have the Spirit. As Domitian scoffed at Saint John the Apostle, when he had cast him into a cauldron of oil; with this saying, Theu art one of the anointed ones: So it is the common practice of licentious Esans, and all vainglorious persons who boast of their abilities to scoff at the godly Ministers of Jesus Christ, with this saying, Come let us hear what these spiritual men say, let us hear what the Spirit speaks in them to day: And to scoff at the godly, calling them the anointed one's of Jesus Christ. As for us we do not care whether we have the Spirit or no. We have learning enough to help us out. As fare as we see, we can discourse better of the things of God, and speak more knowingly than you can, which boast so much of the Spirit. Alas, you are poor silly creatures in comparison of us, who are unacquainted with those things which are fare more excellent and admired by all, than any thing you are capable of. And thus they exalt and magnify themselves in the pride of their own worth, and in the vanity of their own imaginations. These men live without God in the world, and are strangers to the life of grace, and to the power of godliness, to the cross of Jesus Christ, and to the love of God shed abroad in their hearts. They are all for knowledge, yet for the knowledge which will not profit, they must be prying into the Ark, and searching after God's secrets, but little mind the knowledge of God. Who were the patrons and somenters of heresies? were they not the Learned men in the world? Ignorant men could never find out such damnable heresies as have been vented forth in the world. The Quakers a poor company of silly people, carried away with divers lusts, and misled by the delusions of the evil one, could never dream of such blasphemies which they publish forth, had not the Jesuitical party, the offspring of that triple crowned Monster at Rome put them into their heads, that by sowing discord and dissension amongst the servants of Jesus Christ, they might overthrow the Church and Commonwealth. In Scholasticorum scriptis plus argutiarum quam doctrinae, plus doctrinae, quam usus. Whitaker. In the writings of the Schoolmen there is more of subtlety than of learning, and more of learning than of use. Non nisi in magnis ingeniis magni errores. An argument why the Scripture is the Word of God. Arius a great Scholar, who invented the Arian Heresy, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, sed non 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, denying the Divinity of Christ. Nestorius' a great Scholar, who broached the Nestorian Heresy, who divided the Natures in Christ. Eutiches a Scholar, who broached that Heresy that the two Natures did not remain distinct in their properties, but were confused and mingled together. Unsanctified knowledge hath always been a great prop to uphold vanities and delusions in the world, and a great enemy to the truth of the Gospel of Jesus Christ. It is one clear and evident sign that the Scripture is the Word of God, because there hath gone along with it, publishing of it forth to the world, such a prevalency and a power upon the hearts of those with whom they had to deal withal, that let them be never so great opposers to the Majesty of it, by their contradicting and blaspheming, yet all their carnal wisdom and policy could not avail, but they must confess it to be the Word of God, though the pride of their hearts, and the vanity of their corrupt minds would not suffer them to obey it. 11. God hath a time when he will blast upon all other knowledge, but the spiritual wisdom which comes from the Spirit shall endure for ever. When the man of sin shall be destroyed, what a treasure of vain and fruitless knowledge, by the bright shinings forth of the light of the Spirit, which hath so so much been idolised in the world, shall fall into the dust with him? God hath a time to take the wise in their own counsels, and to overthrow the devices of the crafty. God blasted the counsel of Achitophel against David, 2 Sam. 16.23. Though Achitophel was accounted as the Oracle of God for wisdom, whose word was usually taken in difficult matters, yet God at this time when he sets his wit to plot against his servant David, he makes his counsel of none effect. The Princes of Zoan are fools; Isa. 19.11. all their knowledge cannot deliver them in the day of the Lords wrath. There is no evasion whereby thou canst shift off God, and hid thy sins from him, for God knows all the plottings and contrivances which have been in thy heart all the time of thy life. 1 Cor. 1.27. Hos. 5.3. Notitia judicialis, non approbationis. God hath chosen the foolish things of the world to confound the wise. Saith God in the Prophet Hosea, I know Ephraim, and Israel is not hid from me: I know all their shifts and policies and delusions which they have invented to excuse themselves for their idolatry, but when I come to plead with them for the breach of my Covenant, I will lay the glory of their policy in the dust, and destroy them with the breath of my mouth. When once the beams of the Sun of righteousness shall arise upon thy heart, and God shall enlighten thine eyes by his Spirit, than thou wilt count all thy former knowledge, which thou didst so much pride thyself in, but dross and dung in comparison of the excellency of the knowledge of Jesus Christ. But spiritual wisdom endureth for ever, it is of an abiding nature: It is of an establishing nature, it confirms and strengthens the soul against all the temptations and assaults it may meet withal. That heart which is filled with this treasure of heavenly wisdom, is as impregnable as a Castle with bars and irons. Hereby we are instructed with the methods of Satan: we can search into the depths of Satan. Rev. 2.24. Hereby we are furnished with an abiding store of rich grace, whereby we may hold out in the fiery trial. Wisdom and knowledge is the most durable of any treasure that is. But when he was deprived of all his outward comforts, riches, houses, lands, friends, relations, all taken from him, could say, Omnia mea mecum porto, I I carry all things away along with me, because that stock of knowledge which he had, none could take away from him. So likewise a Saint of God hath the stock of knowledge and spiritual wisdom that shall never be taken away from him. I have read of some that have lost that knowledge which they have got by study and their own pains taking. Corvinus a great Scholar was brought so low by a violent fit of sickness, that after he was recovered he forgot his own name; but the Spiritual Wisdom which comes from above shall never be taken away from you. 2. If thou art taught by the Spirit, it is a sign thou art the friend of God, John 15.15. Henceforth I call you not servants, for the servant knoweth not what his Lord doth, but I have called you friends: for all things that I have heard of my Father have I made known unto you. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Chryst. Oh how greatly God condescends to the godly! He speaks to them as a man would speak to his friend. Abraham is called the friend of God; saith God, shall I hid from Abraham the thing which I shall do? from Abraham my friend? from him whom I have called by name to be my servant? 'Tis one part of friendship to reveal secrets. Happy soul, if God be thy friend, who then shall be thy foe? God is a friend that sticketh closer than all relations, than Father, Mother, Brothers, etc. 3. If thou art taught by the Spirit, it is a sign thou art in the Covenant of Grace. It is one part of the Covenant that Believers shall be taught of God. Jer. 31.33. I will put my Law in their hearts, and they shall all know me. It is an exceeding great comfort, and a most special spiritual blessing to be in the Covenant of grace. 1. Because in the Covenant of Grace God makes himself over to the Believer to be his, as the Believer gives himself wholly, totally, and finally to be Gods; My beloved is mine, and I am his. Hos. 2.19. 2. If God be thine, and thou art the Spouse of Jesus Christ, than all things are thine; marriage makes all things common. 3. If God be in Covenant with thee, all the creatures are in league with thee. Several signs whereby we may know we are taught of the Spirit. 1. He that hath the teachings of the Spirit upon his heart is of an humble Spirit. We find in Scripture that the holy men of God, both in the Old and in the New Testament, when they have approached near to God to have any revelation from him, or after they have had a revelation they have abased themselves, and have been of a more submissive frame of Spirit. Isa. 6. Job 42. Job after God had appeared unto him and shown him his own weakness, and his Justice in proceeding with him such a way, saith, I abhor myself in dust and ashes. Isa. 65.5. Is. 34.11. He doth not contemn his weak brother; and like those in Isaiah say, Stand by for I am holier than thou, but as David, he saith, Come unto me, and I will teach you the fear of the Lord, and what he hath done for my soul. He doth not think the better of himself, but the more lowly, and doth admire the Freegrace and love of God unto his soul. See how Paul magnifies the Freegrace of God in discovering unto him the Mystery of Jesus Christ, Unto me who am less than the least of all the Apostles, is this grace given that I should make known to the Gentiles the unsearchable riches of Christ: Eph. 3.8. So a gracious soul is not proud of the teachings of the Spirit upon his heart, but counts meanly of himself, and exalts the Grace of God, that such a one as he who was formerly serving divers lusts, should be admitted into the number of God's Favourites, and to partake of his secrets; he is so far from being proud, that he will stoop and condescend to the meanest Christian for their souls good. The heart of man is full of wickedness, it is a nest full of unclean birds, for if a world of iniquity be in the tongue, Jam. 3.6. How much iniquity is there in the heart? Now when the Spirit shall lead us into every cell and corner of our hearts, as the Lord did the Prophet Ezekiel c. 8. and shall show the still greater and greater abominations, and shall rip up every festered corner therein, and let out all the ill blood, certainly this cannot but humble a child of God; the more a man sees his own vileness, the more he admires the goodness of God unto him, and is sensible of the evil of his sin. Jam. 4.6. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Ex adverso seponit. As God communicates himself to none but to the humble spirit, God resisteth the proud, but he giveth Grace unto the humble; so none have the teachings of the Spirit, but those that are humble. 2. If there be the teachings of the Spirit upon the heart, there will follow more joy than can well be conceived of Archimedes when he had found out a Mathematical demonstration, cried out 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, I have found it, I have found it; how much more wilt thou rejoice when thou shalt know the things of God If Simon when he saw Christ in the Temple cried out, Now Lord let thy servant departed in peace, Luk. 2.29. for mine eyes have seen thy salvation. O how wilt thou rejoice when thou shalt see Christ in thy heart dwelling there by a lively faith? It is not Christ come in the flesh that saves us, but Christ come in the heart, Christ in us is the hope of glory; Col. 1.27. Knowledge is better than life, how much better is the Knowledge of God? If it be such a pleasure to a man to know that which he never knew before, what a pleasure is it to know by the witness of the Spirit upon our hearts, that God in Christ is reconciled to us? Saith the Spouse to Christ, Cant. 1.2. Let him kiss me with the kisses of his mouth, for his love is better than Wine. These words hold forth three things. 1. The great familiarity between Christ and his Church; As a kiss is a sign of homage and obedience. Psal. 2. Kiss the Son lest he be angry. i e. Obey the Son, do homage to him; so it is a sign of familiarity and love, therefore, saith the Apostle, 1 Cor. 16.20. Greet ye one another with a holy kiss, you know, friends after long absence use at their meeting to salute each other with a kiss of love, The familiarity of Christ & a Believer, is in the kisses of his mouth i. e. the teachings of the Spirit. to show their mutual joy at their meeting together again. 2. That this familiarity and mutual love between Christ and his Church comes in by his Word, and by the teachings of his Spirit; he doth not say with the kisses of his lips, but with the kisses of his mouth; the word [Kisses] is taken in Scripture for flattering, soft, and pleasant words, showing forth some love and charity, Prov. 27.6. Faithful are the wounds of a friend, but the kisses of an enemy are deceitful. The Church's desire is, that Christ would instruct her by his Word and Spirit, for his love is better than wine. 3. The love of Christ in the kisses of his mouth to his Spouse, is better than wine; all the comparisons in this book of Canticles are drawn from things which do most of all title our minds and delight our senses; Wine amongst those things which belong to the taste, is the sweetest. The love of Christ in the teachings of his Spirit, is better than all things, better than Wine, than Wine which maketh glad the heart of man. If Christ's love in the kisses of his mouth be better than wine, then certainly the joys which come in by the teachings of God's Spirit, are better than the joys which come in by wine; all the joys which come in by these carnal delights are of a perishing nature, as soon as the act is past, the pleasure is past. A drunkard as soon as his cup is down, the pleasure vanisheth; but the joys that come in by the Spirits teachings are abiding joys, all other joys have a sting at the end of them; sin it hath a fair entrance, The disference between the joys of the Spirit, and other joys. but at the length it bites like an Adder, and stings like a Scorpion; but the joy that comes from the Spirit is without sorrow, it is not adulterate Wine, but pure and sweet Wine, Psal. 122.1. I was glad when they said unto me, let us go into the house of the Lord. Psal. 27.4. One thing have I desired of the Lord, that will I seek after, that I may dwell in the house of the Lord all the days of my life to behold the beauty of the Lord, and to inquire in his Temple. As the Doctrine of Christ exceedeth all other Doctrine, so it breedeth a greater delight and joy in the heart than other Doctrines do. He that hath the light of the Spirit will discern therein a secret and hidden Manna which the world knoweth not of; As the dew descendeth upon the ground, and rejoiceth the earth, and maketh it to flourish; so the Spirits teachings are by the dew to refresh the barren and drooping Spirit, Hos. 14.5. I will be at the dew unto Israel, he shall grow as the Lily, and cast forth his roots as Lebanon, Dent. 32.2. My doctrine shall drop as the rain, my speech shall distil as the dew, as the small rain upon the tender herb, and as the showers upon the grass. As the dew in Spring and Autumn, when the Air is temperate and clear doth fresh the ground and make the herbs to flourish, and to give a sweet smell; so the teachings of the Spirit they cause our hearts to rejoice, they come as the rain upon the dry ground, and as the dew upon the tender herb. Phil. 4.4. A Christian should always be of a joyful Spirit, Rejoice in the Lord always, and again, I say unto you rejoice; 2 Cor. 11, 30. saith Paul, I rejoice in my infirmities; what if thy sins were never so many, Did not Christ satisfy for thy sins? Are thy afflictions heavy upon thy Spirit, the joys which flow in from the Spirit of God, will superabound and exceed all thy afflictions, besides the Spirit will teach thee. Heb. 12.10 1. That all thy afflictions are but to make thee partaker of the holiness of God. Rom. 8.28 2. That they shall work for thy good, all things shall work for the good of them who love God. 3. All thy afflictions cannot hinder God from loving of thee. God loves a Saint in prison, in nakedness, in famine, in distress; God loved Job on the Dunghill, Lazarus with his sores, Paul in prison; yea I may say God is more choice of a Saint under affliction then at another time; as the Goldsmith looks well to the metal while it is in the Furnace, A simile. lest that the least grain of silver be consumed with the dross; so God is very careful lest that the least grain of his servants Graces may perish under the fire of affliction. 4. That all thy afflictions shall make thy future glory. 5. That the cross of Christ hath sanctified the Cross unto thee. 3. If thou hast the Spirits teachings upon thy heart, thou wilt not grudge at the dispensation of God to others, but wilt do what lies in thy power to teach others Thou wilt be so far from grudging that thou wilt magnify the Grace of God, and bless God for what he hath done for others as well as for thyself, Act. 26.27. I would to God, said Paul, that not only thou, but also all that hear me this day, weet both almost and altogether such as I am, except these bonds. Likewise Moses when they told him that Eldad and Medad prophesied, said, Num. 11.29. I could wish that all the Lords people were Prophets. So Christ, Mat. 18. Father, I thank thee that thou hast hid those things from the wise and prudent, and hast revealed them unto Babes, etc. Christ did not envy us his fellow brethren, neither was he ashamed to be called our brother, neither was he unwilling to undergo that great work for the salvation of our precious souls, but he was glad when he saw the fruit of his travail, and it rejoiced his seed; he shall see the travail of his soul and be satisfied. A spiritual man owns the gifts and Graces of God in the hearts of others, Luk. 1.41. as well as in his own heart; as the Babe in Elizabeth's womb leapt for joy at Mary's salutation, so will the new-come Babe within thee leap for joy when thou shalt hear of the salvation brought to light to others. It is the Devil's spirit, and a carnal fleshly spirit to envy the gifts and Graces which are in others; but it is a sign of a true Christian spirit to acknowledge the least grain of true Grace in others, and to cherish it as much as we can. Christ owns whatsoever is of his Spirit in us, a little faith if it be true shall have its reward, and so should we do; Christ acknowledged a little strength in the Church of Philadelphia, Rev. 3.8. Thou hast a little strength, and hast kept my word, Rom 9.3. and hast not denied my name. Paul was so far from envying his Countrymen, that he wished himself accursed from Christ for his brethrens the Jews; and Moses desires to be blotted out of the book of life; Exod. 32.32. Nay thou wilt do all the good that thou canst whence once God hath taught thee to teach others; saith Christ to Peter, When thou art converted strengthen thy brethren. Luk. 22.32. Joh. 1.41. Andrew as soon as he had found the Messiah, he presently telleth his brother Simon of it, that he might also be one of Christ's Disciples; and if ever the true Messiah the King of Glory hath once entered into thy heart, there will be such melt of the heart within thee, that thou canst not refrain, but thou must discover the excellency of Jesus Christ to others. The woman of Samaria in the fourth of John, as soon as she had found the Messiah, she presently left her water-pots and went into the City, telling the Samaritans that she had found the Messiah. So likewise wilt thou do if ever the Sun of righteousness hath risen in thy heart. So the converted thief he presently strives to convert his fellow Thief, Fearest thou not God, saith he, Luk. 23.40. seeing thou art in the same condemnation? The light of the spirit in a regenerate soul cannot be hid, the more thou smotherst it, the more it riseth up, as the fire the more it is pressed down, by and by it riseth up in a greater flame; Saith Christ, No man lighteth a candle, Mat. 5.15. and putteth it under a Bushel. So the Spirit it doth not create a new light within us for nothing, but that we might shine to others and light others, and that others might see by our light, and be warmed by our fire. Ministers are the lights of the world in a more eminent way, as being public lights, lights set upon a hill that all may take notice of them. ☞ They are the Beacons of a Nation to foretell those dreadful Judgements which are coming upon them for their sins if they do not repent. They are to call upon private Christians, that they hang out their lights to the world, that others seeing their good works might glorify their Father which is in heaven. Mat. 5.16. Here private Christians are lights. Every private Christian is to hang out his light in a private way, and to show to others what God hath done for his soul, As every man hath received, so let him freely give, The manifestation of the Spirit is given to every man to profit withal. This is quite opposite to the Pharisaical temper of the Separatists of our times; ☞ they hold it unlawful to have any spiritual commerce with a wicked man, as if they themselves were too worthy to speak unto them, and to pray with them and for them, and so they are more worthy than Christ; or as if they were so wicked that they were past all cure and remedy. Mr. Baxter. If wicked men should be shut out of God's thoughts of love and mercy, as they are out of the affections of the separatists, hell would enlarge herself exceedingly. It is true we are to make none our companions but the godly, saith David, I am a companion of all them that fear thee, Psal. 119.63. but yet for the good of their souls, we must not be strangers and unacquainted with them. How knowest thou, O thou Religious soul, but that by thy good conference, holy life, and pious walking with God, thou mayest gain thy brother, and win him over from his vile course of life to a conscientious performing of the will of God. Christ kept company with Publicans and sinners, but it was for the good of their souls. O that there were not a too censorious Spirit in the hearts of God's people to count them forsaken of God, and not amongst the number of his Saints, who are cast out by them out of their societies. If we were of the right stamp, we should as the Apostle, Become all things to all men in a lawful way that we may win all. Yea it is impossible, if thou hast the teachings of the Spirit upon thy heart, but that thou shouldst make mention of the name of the Lord. The Prophet Jeremiah. when he had a word from the Lord to deliver to the people he could not keep it in, though he strove as much as he could to do it, it was as fire in his bones till it was revealed. Jer. 20.9. It is a great burden to a gracious soul, that he cannot hold forth the truths of God, as the Spirit hath held them forth to his own soul. It is one of the greatest troubles to a saithful soul, when he comes to die that he hath not been so serviceable to the Church of God as he might have been, if he had improved that light and those talents which God hath given him to the best advantage. We must have charity towards all, we must wish well to all, pray for all, relieve all according to our abilities; we must love all; we must love our enemies, but familiarity with all is not expedient; we must edify all, and strive to convert all to the faith of Jesus Christ. Now there be none so fit to edify others as those who have the spirits teachings upon their hearts, Gal. 6.1. Ye which are spiritual restore a fallen brother in the spirit of meekeness. A spiritual man is best acquainted with the evil nature of sin, and what shame and sorrow it brings along with it, with the wrath of God, and with the excellency of Jesus Christ, and that beauty and comeliness which is in his ways. 4. If thou art taught by the spirit, thou art a man of another spirit than thou wert heretofore; as it was said of Caleb, he was a man of another spirit, Num. 14.24. so thou wilt be of another spirit. Wert thou before carnal, now thou shalt be spiritual. Wert thou of a malicious spirit, thou shalt have a spirit of love. Wert thou of a proud spirit, contentious, high minded spirit, thou shalt be of an humble and of a meek spirit. Wert thou under a spirit of bondage, thou shalt be under a spirit of liberty, a spirit of adoption. Wert thou of an unclean, froward, perverse, foolish spirit, thou shalt be of a clean, mild, and of a wise spirit. Wert thou of a base cowardly frame of spirit, that thou wert ashamed to make mention of the name of the Lord, thou shalt be of a courageous spirit, full of a holy zeal for the glory of God. Wert thou of a fearful, doubting, drooping, sad, sorrowful dejected spirit, thou shalt be of a merry, joyful, and of a lightsome spirit. It is said that after Moses came down from the Mount, his face did shine, he had been a talking with God, and afterward his face did shine; So every faithful soul after he hath been in the Mount of contemplation, and hath had the spirit instructing him in the things of God, his heart doth shine with the oil of Grace, and his life doth show forth the praise of him who hath called him out of this state of darkness into this marvellous light. 5. He is of a meek spirit that hath the teachings of the spirit upon his heart, Psal. 25.8. The meek will he guide in judgement, and the meek will he teach his way, Isa. 28.18, 19 In the day shall the deaf hear the words of this book, and the eyes of the blind shall see out of obscurity and out of darkness; The meek also shall increase their joy in the Lord, and the poor among men shall rejoice in the holy one of Israel. Psa. 149.4. The Lord taketh pleasure in his people, he will beautify the meek with salvation. Isa. 61.1. The spirit of the Lord is upon me, because he hath anointed me to preach glad tidings to the meek to bind up the broken spirit. Moses Numb. 11.3. Who is called the meekest man of all the men that were upon the earth, had the nearest approach to God of any that we read of in the book of God; he spoke with God as a man speaks with his friend, or as one man speaks to another, He spoke with God face to face. We must be children in our own account, if we would be taught by the spirit, Psal. 131.2. Surely I have behaved and quieted myself as a child that is weaned of his mother: my soul is even as a weaned child, i. e. As a child is gentle and submissive, you may do what you will with a weaned child; so he was of a tractable spirit ready to yield and to submit to God's dispensations whatsoever they might be unto him; Saith he, Mat. 18.4. He that is not as a little child, shall never enter into the Kingdom of heaven. 1 Cor. 14.20. A little child in respect of meekness and gentleness, and love and amity, according to the Apostle, In malice be ye as children, but in understanding be ye men. The poor receive the Gospel; The poor in spirit that tremble at the word of God, that are wrought upon by a kind work of the spirit upon their hearts, that dread the exceeding goodness of God, and think themselves unworthy of any mercy at all at God's hands, who can undergo any thing what God is pleased to impose upon them, confessing that God punisheth them far less than their iniquities deserve, that God cannot inflict too severe a punishment on them for their sins, Signs of poverty of spirit. and that if any thing besides hell it is a fruit of mercy, and who groan under the burden of their sins, and under the apprehension of God's love unto them who are willing to receive any thing from God's hand; These are the fittest men to be instructed from heaven, if we could perfectly go out of ourselves, and purge ourselves of all created love, we should have the flow in of Divine grace upon our hearts abundantly. If the spirit should teach wicked men, it were but to cast darts against a rock, It is reported of Tigers, that they enter into a rage upon the sent of fragrant spices: so do ungodly men at the blessed savour of Godliness. It is reported of some Barbarous Nations, who when the Sun shines upon them, shoot their A●●ows against it; so do wicked men at the light and heat of godliness, Burroughes. which are so far from admitting any entrance, that they cast back the darts against him that shoots them, but the meek spirited man is ready to receive whatsoever the spirit shall dictate unto him. What ever is written upon a proud and a carnal heart, it is as if it were written upon the sand, now you know what is written upon the sand every blast of wind is apt to deface; so every blast of temptation will blot out whatsoever is written upon a carnal man's heart, but what is written by the finger of God upon a meek spirit, it is as it were engraven in marble never to be done out again. Therefore I know no greater sign that some that pretend most of all to the spirit in these times, are most of all void of it, because they are of such a railing, contentious, froward, perverse, malicious spirit; I am sure they were never so taught by the spirit of God, for the spirit of God is a spirit of love, a spirit of meekness, a spirit of gentleness; meekness is a fruit of the spirit. While they speak of perfection and living without sin in this life, Phil. 3.13, 14. they cry down the Apostle Paul who thought himself not perfect, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. A Metaphor drawn from those who run in a race, who when they approach the Goal, press forward with all their might, their Arms and Legs to touch it. but still pressed on to the mark of the price of the high calling of Jesus Christ. As long as we are of the Laodicean temper, and think ourselves rich and wanting nothing, we are never like to come to Christ to buy raiment of him, and to have that spiritual eyesalve whereby we may discern the things of God; but when we are like Christ, meek and lowly, than we shall find rest unto our souls. God deals with men as he finds them, Psal. 18. With the froward thou wilt show thyself froward, Mat. 11.29. and with the upright thou wilt show thyself upright. Many times God's people are of crabbed and knotty spirits, that God for the present is as it were at a stand what he should do with them, O Ephraim what shall I do unto thee! Hos. 6.4. O Judah what shall I do unto thee! Now as the Carpenter plains the piece of wood, so the Lord plains their hearts; mountains shall be turned into valleys, and the Lords way shall be made strait before him, and of rugged spirits they shall become smooth and the froward spirits become meek and quiet, that the Lord Jesus by his spirit might be portrayed in their hearts; as the piece of wood when it is plained and made smooth is apt to receive any form whatsoever the Carpenter pleaseth; so our hearts when they are once softened by the Spirit, and smoothed by the plainer of affliction, God can mould them and fashion them as he pleaseth. A meek spirit is of a docible disposition, ready to receive, and most apt to retain: most thankful for what he hath, and ever mindful of its own unworthiness. Now here for to prevent mistaking, I should show the nature of meekness, to wit, what this meekness is, Several kinds of meekness. but I shall only show the several kinds of meekness, which are four. 1. A natural meekness, arising out of the constitution of a man's body. 2. A moral meekness, arising from good precepts, instructions and examples. 3. A stoical meekness, which is a sameness of spirit upon all occasions, this is rather a stupidity then a meekness. 4. An artificial meekness, which is when men can restrain their passions, though their heart is as full of envy as it can hold. Such was Esans meekness to Jacob. 5. A true meekness, A true meekness what it is. which is a spiritual frame of heart, whereby a man gives no provocation, and is ready to receive any, and whereby a man moderates, subordinate's, and governs all his anger to the glory of God, and to the good of others. Meekness is passions jailor. True meekness is not always the same, but when God's glory is blasphemed, or any ways diminished, than it turns to zeal and an holy anger. Exod. 32.20, 21, 22. Moses the meekest man upon the earth, when he saw the idolatry of the Israelites, he broke forth into an holy anger, being grieved in his spirit for the dishonour done to God. 6. If thou hast the Spirits teachings upon thy heart, thou art one that fearest God: Psal. 25. What man is he that feareth the Lord, Tiberius Gaesar thought no man fit to receive his secrets; and yet the Lord vouchsafeth the godly his own secrets. None but Noblemen, Lords and Dukes might be made partakers of State-secrets; the godly are heavenly Lords and Nobles, and the privy States men of heavens Court. Such honour have all the Saints to know the things of God. him shall he teach in the way that he shall choose. The secret of the Lord is with them that fear him, and he will show them his Covenant. Mal. 4.2. Unto you that fear my name shall the sun of righteousness arise with healing in his wings. The fear of God it puts a bridle to our lusts and corrupt affections which choke the things of God. As an unruly horse may be curbed with a bit and a bridle; so the fear of God it is as it were a bit and a bridle to curb the extravagancy and the breaking forth of sin. The fear of the Lord is to departed from evil. As a brick wall keepeth in the waters from overflowing the ground and banks, from breaking in upon the meadows, so the fear of God puts a stop to the breaking forth of many a sin, which otherwise we should commit. Now when the strength and the power, and the dominion of sin is taken away, the Spirit comes in with more freedom into the soul. When Joseph was tempted by his Mistress unto uncleanness, he having the fear of God before his eyes, refused her with this saying, How shall I do this great wickedness, and sin against my God Gen. 39.40, 41. Because of this he is clapped up by a false slander of his Mistress into prison: But the Lord was with Joseph in prison, and shown him mercy. And Joseph because he feared God, had the spirit of revelation given him that he could interpret dreams. He expounded the chief Butlers and Baker's dream, and Pharaohs dream. And the Lord honoured him in the sight of Pharaoh and all his servants. By humility and the fear of the Lord come riches, Pro. 22.4. honour and life. Daniel because he feared God, Dan. 9.24. and would not consent to worship other gods, the Lord revealed unto him the expiration of the seventy years' captivity which was at hand. And Noah because he feared God, Heb. 11.7. an hundred and twenty years before the overflowing deluge came, had this secret committed unto him, that God did intent to drown the world for that deluge of sin which was then in it. By faith Noah being Warned of God, being moved with fear, prepared an Ark for the saving of his house, and thereby condemned the ungodly World. The salvation of the Lord is nigh them that fear him, that glory may dwell in our Land. The fear of Gods glorious Majesty, and unquestionable authority, puts the soul into a fit capacity to be taught by the Spirit. As long as a man is presumptuous, self-confident, and thinks himself somewhat when he is nothing, there is no place for any doctrine of Jesus Christ. God usually puts men into great fears and terrors, and then raiseth them up, before he communicates himself unto them: Jer. 3.33. I will put my fear before them, and write my law in their hearts. Several kinds of fear. There is a fourfold fear. 1. A natural fear, which in itself is not sinful, because God hath put this affection of fear into our hearts. So Christ feared to die. 2. A servile or a slavish fear, when men fear God, not for his goodness, but only for his justice and his greatness: Contrary to the Prophet, who saith, Fear the Lord and his goodness. Hos. 3.5. When they fear God as a consuming fire, but not as a gracious Father. When they fear to offend out of a sense of hell, and not out of any love they bear to God. 3. A filial fear, when men fear to offend God who hath been so gracious a Father unto them, who hath done them so much good, and shown them so much mercy. When they consider what an ocean of love was showed unto them by God, when they lay wallowing in their blood, by pitying them in their condition, and showing them mercy in Jesus Christ. The love of God constrains a Saint to an obedience of him. And a child of God hath such ingenuity in him, and such a sonlike affection to God his Father, that he would not willingly grieve him for the whole world. 4. A reverential fear, so the Angels in heaven they are said to fear God, because they do him reverence. The Saint's reverence God, Rev. 4.10. casting down their Crowns before him that sitteth upon the Throne. That vast disproportion between God and the creature, he being the fountain and we the streams; who hath his being of himself, depending upon none, and we continually depending upon him; cannot but work a reverence and a godly sear in the hearts of those that love him and embrace him. 7. If thou hast the Spirits teachings upon thy spirit, upon thy heart, thou wilt still desire to have further discoveries of the Spirit upon thy heart. Thou wilt much be exercised in all those ways and means the Spirit useth to come down. Much in private prayer, in that heavenly duty of spiritual meditation, much at home with thyself, and less gadding abroad in thy desires and affections. There was a time when the children of Israel said unto Moses, Exod. 20.19. Speak thou unto us and we shall hear, let not the Lord speak unto us lest perhaps we die. But when was this? When the Lord came down upon mount Sinai, with thunderings and lightnings to give his Law unto his people. But now under the Gospel when the Spirit is poured forth abundantly, a child of God rather cries out with the Prophet Samuel, Speak Lord, 1 Sam. 3.10. for thy servant heareth. Let not Moses, or thy servants only instruct me, but rather do thou speak, my Lord God, by thy Spirit in my heart, who art the enlightner of all the Prophets, for thou alone with them canst perfectly instruct me, but they without thee can profit nothing. As Mary sat down at Christ's feet to hear the gracious words which proceeded from his mouth, so thou wilt wait at the Ordinances to have more flow in of the Spirit upon thee. ☜ When a soul shall remember, at such a time such a spiritual truth was imparted unto me, at such a time, and in such a place I was convinced that such a thing was a sin, and by the power of the Spirit overcome to a forsaking of it: that such a thing was a duty; that I was settled in my mind concerning such a Tenet; that I had a fuller assurance of God's love upon my heart than formerly; this will make the soul pant and breath after a more full manifestation of spiritual things. As David cries out, Psal. 42.2. When shall I come and appear before God? so thou wilt cry out, When will the time be that I shall have another teaching of the Spirit upon my heart! Psal. 63.2. Lord, let me see thy outgoings in the Sanctuary, as formerly I have seen. Let me hear thy voice, O blessed Saviour, for sweet is thy voice, and thy countenance is comely. Teach me thy statutes, show me wisdoms path. Instruct me in the way that I should walk in. Show unto me the joy of thy salvation, and uphold me with thy free Spirit. 8. He that hath the Spirits teachings upon his heart, is of a heavenly mind, and can perform all duties in a spiritual manner. As it is impossible for a man at once to look upwards towards heaven, and downwards towards the earth; so it is impossible for a Christian with one and the same judgement and affection, to look upon earthly and heavenly things. He counts the riches and honours and pleasures of the world, but as crumbs cast to dogs; but as trivial things not worth the mentioning, in comparison of the enjoyment of God in Christ. He is resolved not to be put off with those common mercies, and not to receive his good things in this life; but he tramples upon all these things under the Moon, as mutable, and that pass away, having his eye fixed upon that eternal weight of glory in heaven, and upon that Crown of bliss and happiness reserved for him. A simile. As children when they come to be men they put away childish things, bowling-stones, counters, and all other vain and foolish sports and pleasures, and become more serious and solid, weighing what will become of them, and how they may live in the world; so when thou art taught of the Spirit, thou wilt abandon all former delights when thou wert in the flesh, and count the world thy enemy, which would have kept thee from Jesus Christ, yea the memory of thy vain conversation, when thou livedst according to the course of the world, will be bitter unto thee, and thou wilt count all the things of this world but toys and trifles in comparison of the true and the heavenly riches. When a spiritual man hath the things of this life, he doth not set his heart upon them, he doth not trust in them, Mat. 6.33. he looks upon them but as additionals, and as a handful over and above into the bargain of eternal life; but his heart is where is treasure is, even in heaven. In the fullness of all things his heart is empty: and in the want of all things he can enjoy all things in Jesus Christ. The more the understanding is enlightened to see the excellency of a thing, and the necessity of it, Whether the will follows the last dictate of the practical understanding. presently the will closeth with it. And though in outward things the will doth always follow the last dictate of the practical understanding, for Medea said, — Video meliora, probóque, Deteriora sequor.— Yet the will of a Saint cannot but follow the last dictate of the practical understanding taught by the Spirit. Now the Spirit it puts a new face upon things; it takes away the false painted mask which the world and our own corrupt hearts had cast upon those transitory things, and that vizard Satan had put upon them, and shows us the emptiness, the insufficiency, the vanity, the mutableness, the inconstancy, and the perishing nature of them, that they are weak inconsiderable things which cannot afford the least solid joy and comfort. That the pleasures of sin and the world are but as the cracklings of thorns under a pot, which blaze for the present, Eccls 7 6. but suddenly are out. That all the creatures are but broken cisterns, Jer. 2.13. pits which can hold nothing but muddy and defiled comforts. Besides the Spirit it teacheth us the fullness of God, the sufficiency that is in Jesus Christ, the joys that flow in from above, and what a mass of glory is treasured up for us if we continue faithful unto the death. Mark 14.25. That the time is at hand when we shall drink the new wine of eternal consolation with Jesus Christ in the Kingdom of heaven hereafter. When a man hath a spirit of discerning, to discern between the true riches, and the fading riches of this world, and the Spirit hath enlightened his understanding, and he sees the what things are prepared for him hereafter; if he love God and keeps his Commandments. He is more Saintlike, and is as it were a stranger upon earth, seeking rest and finding none, till he come to his Father's house and finished his course. One that is taught of the Spirit, can do all duties in a spiritual manner. He can pray in the Spirit, sing in the Spirit, walk in the Spirit, live after the Spirit, war after the Spirit, rejoice in the Spirit, and subdue his sins by the strength of the Spirit. His affections, desires, aims, and intentions are heavenly. You may see a spiritual man by his going, by his talking, by his eating and drinking, by his company, by his continual course and progress in his life. Watch him narrowly, ☞ and you may see somewhat of the Spirit in his common carriage: he doth not mind the world: he lives as it were a stranger upon earth: all his discourse is about his father's business, and of heavenly things. He cares not so much what becomes of his body, so his soul may prosper. All his delight is with the excellent, and with those that fear God. He is often upon his knees confessing his sins, and abhorring himself for his iniquities. He is much with God, and little with the world, and if it stood with God's good pleasure, and the Churches good, he could be absent from the body, Phil. 1.23, 24. that he may be present with the Lord. self-denial is the great lesson he is continually a cunning; sin is his greatest burden, the world his purgatory, Jesus Christ his only joy, God his portion, and heaven his rest. Now I come to show what are the extraordinary teachings of the Spirit, that so we may know the one from the other. 1. A man hath then an extraordinary teaching of the Spirit upon his heart, when he is certain God will give him the same thing he asked of him in prayer, in the very same kind and manner he asked it of God: when he is fully persuaded, and verily believes that God will grant him the very same thing which he asked of him. It is an extraordinary work of the Spirit upon the heart that must produce such a strong confidence in God, that God will give him the very same thing he desires. When a soul can say, I know that God heareth me always, and will hear me in this thing, and give me my hearts desire, especially when there is no promise in the word made to that particular thing which he prays for: As suppose thou hadst a friend sick, and thou prayest for his recovery; and hast such a strong confidence in God by the Spirit, that thou undoubtedly believest that he shall recover; such a confidence had Luther, when he wrote to Myconius, hearing that he was sick, that without he should recover; so he did, according to Luther's prayer. So had Elijah when he prayed for rain; and Jesus Christ when he did his miracles. 2. When a soul hath that Plerophory, that full assurance of faith without all doubting; then he hath an extraordinary teaching of the Spirit upon his heart. When he can say with Job, I know that my redeemer liveth; Job 19.25 and though worms destroy my body, yet I shall see him with these very eyes. 2 Tim. 4.7. And with Paul, I have fought the good fight of faith, I have finished my course, hence forth there is laid up for me a Crown of life, etc. When a soul can say by the full evidence of the Spirit upon his spirit, without the least wavering or doubting, I know that both in life and death Christ shall be unto me advantage. When a soul can merrily and cheerfully rejoice in the expectation of the glory of God. Many precious Saints are without this full assurance till they come to die, as that godly Martyr Mr Glover was, who was full of fears and doubts till he came to the stake, and then out of a sense of Jesus Christ, he cries out, He is come, he is come. That is, Jesus Christ was come with his extraordinary comforts unto his soul; the Spirit of God sealing unto him the pardon of his sins, and the love of Jesus Christ unto his soul. 3. When a soul hath such a spirit of zeal, courage and magnanimity in the ways of God; that though he were the Butt of the whole world, and the laughingstock of men and Angels for the cause of God, and were persecuted on all sides, yet he patiently can undergo it for the sake of Christ. These are Saints of the first magnitude, who have more than ordinary to other Saints, flow in of the Spirit upon their hearts. Such were the Apostles; Luther, Ignatius, Athanasius, Gregory, Nazianzen, and the like. Tempore Athanasii totus mundus gemuit sub Ario. The Martyr Antipas, who is spoken of in the Revelation of St John, Rev. 2.13. who dwelled where Satan had his seat, and kept himself unspotted amongst that wicked and perverse generation, and witnessed to the truth with the loss of his life, had an extraordinary measure of the Spirit upon his heart. 4. When men have an infallible Spirit, so that whatsoever they say is truth, and as it were an Oracle from God; and when upon all emergencies they have Divine influences from the Spirit of grace, than they have the extraordinary teachings of the Spirit: When they have an infallible Spirit, so only had the Apostles. For they being universal messengers of Jesus Christ, not tied to one particular place, but to plant Churches in several places, and to pen one part of the Word of God, which was to be a standing rule to the end of the world, they were guided by the infallible Spirit of God; so that they could not err in things which belong to faith and piety. Only the Apostles were infallible in their doctrine. Popes and general Councils may err, and have erred grossly from the faith. Also when upon all exigencies they have the supplies of the Spirit of God, than they have the extraordinary teachings of the Spirit, so had the Apostles: Luke 12.11. And when they bring you unto the Synagogues, and unto Magistrates and Powers, take ye no thought, how or what thing ye shall answer, or what ye shall say; For the holy Ghost shall teach you in the same hour what ye ought to say. Whether the Saints in the Primitive times who suffered for the Gospel, or the Martyrs in Queen Mary's days had not these influences of the Spirit upon their sad exigencies, when they were brought before their cruel persecutors, to answer for themselves, is beyond all controversy. Certainly silly men and women, I mean, in respect of any deep knowledge, could never on a sudden express their minds so excellently concerning the things of God; had they not more than ordinary at such a time the teachings of the Spirit upon their hearts: witness that woman of Exeter, mentioned in the Book of Martyrs, with many others. The times wherein the Spirits teachings are most manifest. 1. In times of affliction thou art most of all sensible of the teachings of the Spirit upon thy heart. In themselves they manifest nothing to the soul but the displeasure of an angry Judge, intending to destroy them; but the Spirit concurring along with them, and showing us the mind and will of God, they are precious cordials and purgations for the sin of our souls. If afflictions could make us hearken to the voice of God, and savingly instruct us and teach us those things which concern our everlasting peace, why do not many wicked wretches who live under the scourge of the Almighty all their days? who have one wave of affliction after another upon them, learn obedience by the rod, and understand the mind and intent of God. Afflictions in themselves are neither good nor evil, but accordingly as they are improved by us through the help of the Spirit according to the will of God. Now although the Spirit hath written the things of God long before upon our hearts, yet the manifestation of those things most of all is apparent to us, when God doth instruct us by his rod, together with his Spirit, that those graces which for a long time were not discerned by us, being pressed down by affliction, may send forth a precious smell in the nostrils of our God, and to the sense of others. We learn by afflictions; 1. To see those things which we never perceived to be in us before, to wit, the actings of divine grace in us, supporting us and carrying us along cheerfully through this valley of Baca; and the actings of our spirit towards God again in way of filial affection, and sonlike obedience under his hand, being taught by the Spirit what the mind of God is concerning them. As no man knoweth the vileness of his heart, till God is pleased to let Satan have his liberty to tempt him, and his own hearts lusts to draw him aside: So none can know the prevailings of grace upon his own heart, and the efficacy of divine teachings, and the trial and experience of those things which are written upon his heart till God shall bring him under the fiery trial. The Spirit hath taught us that all trust and confidence is to be reposed in God alone, because God alone is able to deliver us, and that we may thereby be quit and set free from all those distracting fears which do molest us: Psal. 37.5. Commit thy ways unto the Lord, that thy thoughts may be established. Now our confidence in God is then most of all exercised, when all other props and stays do fail us, and we cast ourselves under the arms of Almighty God. We know not our own strength against the temptations of sin and Satan, that we are fortified with the whole armour of God, Ephes. 6. to wit, the shield of faith, the helmet of hope, the breastplate of righteousness, the sword of the Spirit, the Spirit of prayer and supplication, the inward support and aid of the Spirit of God, and the continual prayers of Jesus Christ interceding for us at the right hand of his Father, that our graces fail not in the hour of tribulation, till God shall smite us with his rod. By afflictions the teachings of the Spirit of God upon our hearts are most known to others. Rev. 14.12. Here we may read the patience of the Saints, the sincerity of their hearts, the power of divine grace, and the sweetness of the comforts of the Spirit upon their hearts, when we see them cheerfully, willingly, and joyfully submitting themselves to the good pleasure of God. 2. By afflictions we are more and more acquainted with the evil nature of sin which hath brought such afflictions upon us, with the holiness of God which cannot away with sin and sinners, and with the exact justice of God against it, in so severely punishing of it, with the benefit that comes by seeking God's face, and by walking up to the light which God hath put within us. 3. The Spirit of God is very active upon the hearts of believers at such a time, in rooting out the remainders of original corruption, and in the exciting of those things which he hath put within them. 2. Near the time of death. Sweet have been the discoveries of God's Spirit upon the hearts of his children when they have been near the time of their dissolution, for these reasons. 1. Because near such a time Satan and all our spiritual enemies will muster up all their assaults to weaken a believers faith, hope and confidence in God, especially when the believer hath been a heinous sinner formerly, and after his conversion hath fallen into some gross sin to the wounding of his own conscience, and to the quenching of the blessed Spirit for a time, though the sin is done away by the blood of Jesus Christ, and the pardon of it sealed by the testimony of the Spirit, yet the devil will be pudling in this old sore, and persuading him to the contrary, telling him that his conversion was never real, because since he hath fallen so foully in the flesh. The devil tempted Christ when he was near the time of his suffering, to drive him from his hope and confidence in God his Father. Saith Christ, The Prince of this world cometh and hath nothing in me. Joh. 14.30 Christ was perfectly holy, so that no temptation could take hold of him to overcome him, ☞ or to taint him with the least sin. But we poor creatures, when the devil comes to tempt us, have something in us, we have a great deal of unbelief abiding in us, we have a body of sin and of death, and hereupon our bulwarks would easily fall, our confidence in God would easily give place to unbelief, were not the Spirit of God which is in us, stronger than him who by way of eminency is in the world, 1 Joh. 4.4. to wit, the devil. Now God on the other side fills a believer with continual fresh and renewed supplies of his Spirit, and with new experiences of his love unto him, bringing unto his remembrance all former loving kindnesses passed between God and his soul, what a great work was wrought upon him in the work of conversion? what various dispensations of God's providence he hath undergone, and all to the benefit of his precious soul: what heavenly Soliloquies have been between God and his soul in private Prayer and heavenly Meditations, what reiterated conquests he hath had over his domineering lusts, and what spiritual wisdom to discern the sleights of the Devil! How often he hath had the witness of the spirit upon his heart, though for a season the spirit hath withdrawn its testimony! What groans and sighs, and daily complaints under the sense of the burden of his sins! What change hath been wrought upon him considering his vain conversation while he was in the flesh, what experimental truths, both Theoretical and Practical for the establishment of his soul in grace, have been imparted unto him, and what future hopes of glory he hath enkindled in his breast by the operation of the spirit, that so his faith and hope might be in God alone at the hour of death! 2. To express those fears which are within us arising from that original corruption, and from that unbelief which is in the best of God's servants, which do most of all show themselves at such a time. A believers fears are commonly more than his hopes, when the hopes of a wicked man, and of a presumptuous sinner overcome all his fears. Fear it is a distracting passion filling the mind with a multitude of trembling, amazing, astonishing, tumultuating, perplexing thoughts that a true child of God many times is in great doubts when he comes to die; but yet the spirit of God will bring in at such a time, such sweet experiences of God's love to his soul, of what God hath done for him, that though he may not have the full assurance of faith which is without any doubting at all, yet he shall have sufficient motives and encouragements to keep him, as from sinking and despair, and upon firm grounds to repose himself in God for salvation upon the account of Jesus Christ. Perfect love casteth out all slavish fear, and when once the soul is well grounded in this principle, that God loved him in Christ before the foundation of the world, of which love he hath had some foretastes thereof by the earnest of his spirit in his heart, there is no ground left for despair, but for a firm belief that God is his, and he is Gods; God keepeth his strongest arguments to oppose the greatest conflicts. Now I come to answer those doubts which arise from the Spirits teachings on the hearts of Believers. 1. Quest. How may we distinguish between the teachings of the spirit, and that common Illumination spoken of in in the sixth of the Hebrews 4. verse, which persons being so enlightened may fall away finally to the perdition of their immortal souls. 1. Common illumination never descends to particulars, but remains only in generals. A carnal man may know what faith is, what repentance is, what humiliation is, what self-denial is, what sincerity is, what new obedience is. He may know all those things in a general way, but he can never come to particulars by way of propriety unto himself. He cannot say I believe, I repent, I am truly humbled for my sins, I have learned the lesson of self-denial, I am sincere, I am obedient to the will of God; but the light of the spirit within makes a Christian to say experimentally, feelingly, out of that abundance of comfort, which he hath by reason of the experience of those things upon his soul, that Christ is mine, and I am his, I have given glory to God by believing, I have worked the works of God, I have had the spirit of God leading me into the Land of uprightness. Rom. 4.20. I have that heavenly fire of love enkindled in my breast by the divine sparks of light from heaven, Psal. 143.10. which will burn for ever, still ascending to be united unto God in heaven. The valley of Baca is turned into a valley of vision, though not the immediate fruition. The teachings of the spirit do make a Christian go to particulars, because what the spirit teacheth, if it be a habit, or a qualification connatural to the soul as spiritual; the spirit worketh the same quality in it, The spirit teacheth us to believe, and the spirit worketh faith in us, for faith it is the gift of God. 2. Common Illumination produceth but a common faith which is rather presumption then true faith, a common love which is rather lukwarmness than the ardent love which is a fruit of the spirit, a common joy which is rather like a flash of lightning, than that Meridian joy of the Saints of Jesus Christ, a common humiliation, which is rather an Ahabs humiliation, a legal conviction upon the soul by the terror of the Law, than any true genuine sorrow for the displeasure done to God by their sins, a common hope which is rather self conceitedness and vain confidence, than that lively hope which purifies the soul, a common well-wishing to leave their sins then a settled determinate resolution to forsake them, and to turn to the Lord God with all their hearts. As a man's knowledge is, so is his faith, so is his love, so is his obedience. Now this knowledge which ariseth from common illumination, it never savingly works upon the heart to an hearty obedience of the things known, it is never joined with true Grace; but that knowledge which comes from the teachings of the spirit works a true faith in the soul, and is ever accompanied with all the saving effects of the blessed spirit The Apostle joins Grace and Knowledge both together, Grow in Grace and in the Knowledge of Jesus Christ; 2 Pet. 3.18. For where there is a sanctified knowledge, there is true and saving Grace. 3. Common Illumination never makes a man serious in the service of God to serve him constantly, let his condition be what it will; but as his joys and his outward comforts are, so are his services unto God, as when the Mood & the Fit takes them, than they will seem Religious, like the Lunatics which are mad only at the full of the Moon, when any profit or honour, or any advantage goeth along with the serving of God; or when nothing is offered which may displease their carnal minds, than who but they in an outward profession for the serving of God; but the teachings of the spirit make a Christian resolute in the ways of God, like Noah, that his whole life shall be nothing else but a continual walking with his God. A true Christian, let his outward state and condition be what it will, yet he will be sure not to forget his God, his Maker, his Preserver, his All in All, in whom are all things, and in whom he enjoys all things; but like Zachary and Elizabeth, as far as he can he will walk in all the commandments of the Lord blamelessly. 4. Common Illumination it breeds not the evidence and demonstration of the Spirit, whereby a man upon good and solid grounds, may truly believe that he hath an interest in Jesus Christ in the Covenant of grace, and in all those privileges which belong to the Saints, because the spirit of sanctification abides upon him, but merely an opinionative, selfconceited, vain glorious, presuming confidence that Christ is his and he is Christ, though no regard be had to those qualifications which are required in those, in whose hearts Christ dwells by his blessed spirit. Every hypocrite that hath been once enlightened, and tasted of the heavenly gift, and of the powers of the world to come will lay claim to the privileges of the Saints, and of the benefits that flow upon the account of the death and sufferings of Jesus Christ, though their hearts were never truly wrought upon to a full and a final closing with Jesus Christ, and they never had the witness of the spirit upon their hearts, that he is the child of God; but the teachings of the spirit bring in unto the soul solid reasons founded upon the word of God, and upon the experience of the Saints, whereby from the foregoing premises he can draw a true and a real conclusion that he is Christ's, and Christ is his. Justification and sanctification are inseparable, according to that golden chain of man's salvation, Rom. 8.30. Whom he justified them he also sanctified; so that besides the testimony of the spirit, he hath those inherent principles of sanctification within him, whereupon he may evidently conclude that he is no changeling, but a new born creature a true Citizen of the heavenly Jerusalem, a true son amongst the Native sons of Zion. But some weak Believer may say, how may I distinguish between the Witness and the testimony of the spirit, that I am the child of God; and that vain confidence and presumption which is in wicked men's hearts, who say they are the children of God, when they are not? 3. The spirit doth not only bear witness, but fully persuade us of this very thing upon solid reasons which we find true by our own experience that we are the children of God; therefore saith that knowing Apostle Saint John, 1 John 3.14. 1 john. 4.13. We know that we are passed from death to life, because we love the brethren. Hereby know we, that we dwell in him and he in us, because he hath given us of his Spirit. But wicked men who are full of carnal confidence and sinful presumption have no sweet experience of saving grace upon their souls, or any testimony, much less a persuasion of the spirit that they are the children of God; The grounds of carnal presumption. but this presumption ariseth from a bare conceit of their good estate, still hoping well of themselves, or from the delusion of the Devil, who hath besotted their minds with his sinful Sophistry. 2. The spirits testimony is founded upon God's word, and not upon any testimony from ourselves. 3 Wheresoever the spirits testimony is upon the hearts of any, there follows a hatred of sin, zeal for the glory of God, a care and conscience to serve God in all wellpleasing; for as some eminent Divines do say, though I do not pin my faith upon any man's sleeve, but only as the light of the word and the light of the spirit teacheth me; the doctrine of assurance will not make a Christian secure and idle in the work of the Lord, ☜ but more watchful over his ways, and more thankful for so great a mercy, being constrained by the love of God to the obedience of the truth; and that the preaching of the Cross of Christ, what love and mercy God the Father and Jesus Christ, what power and wisdom was put forth in that great work of man's Redemption is of a more prevailing nature then to preach the terrors of the Law against sin and sinners, to bring men out of their natural condition, though both ways must be used, even by fear plucking them forth out of the fire of hell. 2. Quere, Whether or no are the spirits teachings, or the light of the spirit in the heart of a Believer a sufficient plea for him to cast off all Ordinances, means of grace as unprofitable things under so clear a dispensation? I answer no, 1. For as Jesus Christ in explaining the Law of Moses did not abrogate the law or derogate any thing from the use and majesty of it, Mat. 6. but only clear it from those foul aspersions which the Pharisees had cast upon it; so the spirit in teaching us the things of God, and in enlightening our minds to understand his will, doth not take away the use of the word, but adds a further light unto it, that we may understand the mind of the spirit in it, and that all those prevarications by reason of the darkness of our understanding may be rightly placed; The Sun is full of light, but a blind man cannot see it. So the word is clear in itself, but because our understandings are darkened we cannot understand it. Now the spirit of God doth five things in order to the word of God. 1. It explains it. 2. It gives a further authority unto it. 3. Shows us the majesty, The spirits actings in reference to the word. purity, and excellency of it. 4. Makes us to prise it above all things. 5. Enables us to keep it. 2. Because the word of God acknowledgeth no Spirit but what works in and by the word, Gal. 5.2. Received ye the spirit by the Law, or by the hearing of faith? Did ye not receive the spirit by the preaching of the doctrine of saving faith in the Lord Jesus Christ? The spirit teacheth, which is consonant and agreeable to the word of God; so that the word and the spirit both concur together, the spirit as the principal agent, the word as the instrument which can do nothing without the spirit to teach us the will of God; and to work in us all those saving Graces which accompany salvation. 3. Because the word of God in the Scripture is set down as a standing rule according to which we must frame our lives unto the end of the world, 1 Tim. 3.13. Till I come give attendance to Reading, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Attendere cum diligentia cu ram adhibere. to Exhortation, to Doctrine. 15. Meditate upon these things, give thyself wholly to them, that thy profiting may appear unto all. 16. Take heed unto thyself, 1 Pet. 1.23. Mat. 5.18. and unto thy doctrine; continue in them, etc. The word of God which liveth and abideth for ever. Not the least tittle of the word of God shall fail till all things be accomplished, some of which things will not be fulfilled till the end of the world. The Sacraments also are in use and have their efficacy for that end for which they were appointed by God in his Church, to the end of the world. 1 Cor. 11.26. By the Sacrament of the Lords Supper, we are to remember the Lords death till he come; so that till Christ shall come again at the last day in glory, power, and majesty, we shall stand in need of the Sacrament of the Lords Supper for the confirmation of our faith, and to remember the death and sufferings of our blessed Saviour till he shall come to judgement. Prayer also is a standing duty required of all Christians while they are on this side heaven, that thereby their faith and hope in God might be exercised. We are commanded to pray continually, that is, to let no time wherein this duty is required of us. 1 Thess. 5. 4. Because a Believer stands in need of continual food and nourishment, that the tent of the word, and the Bread and Wine Sacramentally so understood should be continually put in his mouth whilst he is under age in respect of that perfection and ripeness he shall attain unto when this mortal life shall be swallowed up in glory, that his soul might be nourished up unto everlasting life. Likewise here bebelow we stand in need of many things, strength of grace to overcome sin, patience under adversity, the arm of God to support us under all our weaknesses, heavenly comforts, daily supplies of the spirit of grace, renewed arts of Divine assistance continually, bread for our bodies, food for our souls; therefore we ought to make our requests by prayer unto God daily for all temporal and spiritual blessings. Obj. When we have the greater light, what need have we of the lesser, when we have the Sun-light, what need have we of the Starlight, when we have the light of the spirit, what need have we of the light of the word, when we have that which supplieth all our wants, what need we pray, what need have we of the Sacraments, the spirit can supply all our wants without the use of the means? 4. In respect of ourselves the light of the spirit is to be preferred before the light of the word, but seeing that the light of the word is subordinate to the light of the spirit, and that the light of the word, and the light of the spirit do not differ in respect of the subject matter, but only in respect of manifestation, and the spirit enlightens in and by the word, therefore the light of the spirit doth not take away the use of the light of the word; besides the comparison doth not hold, because the collation between the light of the Sun and Stars, and the light of the word and of the spirit halts, and is imperfect. The spirit enlightens our minds in and by the word, but the Sun shines of its self, and not in and by the Stars. The spirit likewise though it can supply all our wants without the use of means, yet it never ordinarily doth without the use of the means; God gives his spirit only to those that pray for it, and when we have the spirit, we are still to desire God that his spirit may exert his power upon us, and act in us and by us, that we may not only have the spirit but feel the operations of the spirit upon our hearts. God knows what we want before we pray, and can give us them without our ask, but God will have us pray that thereby we might acknowledge his power, his goodness, his mercy, and the like, and that thereby our faith and patience might be made manifest. If upon the account of the indwelling of the spirit in the hearts of the godly, they should forbear to pray. I would know of those who say so, why the Spirit of God is termed the spirit of prayer and supplication, as in the prophecy of Zachariah, Zech. 12.10. but only because it stirs up in us good desires, and holy affections, and puts words into our mouths, acceptable words, whereby our petitions may be accepted of God. Let them likewise answer the portion of Scripture if they can in the sixth of the Ephesians 18. Praying always with all prayer and supplication in the spirit, and watching thereunto with all perseverance and supplication for all Saints. 5. If we should only hearken to the voice of the spirit, and to the spirits teachings in our hearts, there would be no certainty of the true Religion, when there can be no Character given by which the spirit of Christ might be distinguished from our own proper spirit, as from the spirit the devil which sometimes transforms himself into an Angel of light. That is, the pretences of a man's own spirit, or of the devil in the hearts of others may seem so true and real to a man himself, as if they were doctrines taught by the blessed Spirit. Now how should we try the spirits whether they be of God or no? but by the word of God. Obj. It is a true sign of Divine instinct, when of that which we believe or do we are persuaded of, and rooted in without any ambiguity or doubting. Ans. This is a false sign, for the Turks and Infidels are as much obstinated and settled in their own doctrines & Traditions, yea more settled than most of those Christians who pretend so much to the spirit. Q. But some may say, though we grant you that the teachings of the spirit do not in themselves make us to be above the Ordinances of God, and the means of Grace, yet may we not then when we come to be perfect Christians, high-grown Saints, and have lived under the teachings of the Spirit along while, may we not then cast off the use of the Word, the Sacraments and Prayer, and only depend upon the Spirit for his supply? I answer, No. 1. Because the best grown Christians in this life are not above the teachings of the word; but aught to mind the light of the Word, as well as the light of the Spirit: Rom. 1.14. I am debtor both to the Greeks and to the Barbarians, both to the wise and to the unwise. Heb. 5.14. But strong meat belongeth to them that are of age, Strong meat, the Word and Sacraments. which through long custom have their wills exercised to discern both good and evil. 1 John 2.13. I writ unto you fathers, because ye have known him that is from the beginning, etc. 1 Pet. 1.1. The Apostle Peter writes to the elect ones, and to those who are born again, as appears by the fourteenth verse of the same Chapter. 1 Cor. 10.15. I speak as unto them which have understanding. Phil. 3.15. Let us therefore as many as be perfect, be thus minded. 1 Cor. 11.26. Eph. 4.12, 13. He gave some Apostles, some Prophets, etc. Till we all meet together in the unity of the faith, and the acknowledgement of the Son of God, unto a perfect man, and unto the measure of the fullness of the stature of Christ; which fullness shall not be till after this life, as appears by that place, 1 Cor. 13.9, 10.11. For we know in part, and we prophesy in part, but when that which is perfect is come, then that which is in part shall be abolished. 2. Because the highest grown Christians in this life are in their infancy, as it were till they arrive at heaven. Ob. What do you say to that place in Joel, Joel 2.28. where it is said, that I will pour out my Spirit upon all flesh, and your sons and your daughters shall prophesy, etc. And to that place in the Prophet Isaiah, where it is said, Isa. 30.26. that the light of the Moon shall be as the light of the Sun, and the light of the Sun seven fold: And to that place in John, 1 John 2.27. where it is said, that you have rectived the unction of the holy one, and you need not that any man teach you. Ans. I answer, that in these places of Scripture is only held forth a more plentiful giving of the Spirit under Gospel-times, than under the former dispensations: Therefore it is said, that the Spirit was not yet given, because Christ was not yet ascended. The performance of which prophecy was upon the Apostles, together with other elected Saints, Act. 2. Hence then is no place given for Enthusiasms, because it is usual with the Prophets of the old Testament, when they did speak of the restauration or amplification of the Church of God to set it forth Tropically under figures and shadows, Zach. 14. Mal. 1.11. with many other places. For that place in the Epistle of St John, it holds forth unto us this, that for those fundamental truths which the Saints had received from him, from which the false Apostles did seek to remove them, they needed not again to be reestablished in, these truths being set home upon their spirits by the Spirit of God, but only words of exhortation to stir them up to execute and to put in practice those fundamental truths which they had received. Ob. But what say you to that passage of Scripture in the 2 of Peter 1.19. where it is said, We have also a more sure word of prophecy, whereunto you do well that ye take herd, as unto a light that shineth in a dark place, until the day dawn, and the day star arise in your hearts. Ans. The Apostle in these words doth not take away the use of the word, and other means of grace; but the scope of the place as I gather from the context, rather tends to the establishing of the word, and other means of grace, till Christ who is the morning star, the day star in the morning of the resurrection, shall arise in the hearts of his elect ones after a more glorious manner than when they were in this body of flesh, in this world, which is rather a state of darkness than of the light, in comparison of that light of knowledge, of joy, and of comfort, which shall be to the Saints in heaven. To explain the words. The Apostle having before in the foregoing words declared the certainty of the doctrine of the Gospel, both from his own experience, and from the testimony of God the Father; now in these words he confirms the certainty of it from the consent of the Prophets under the old Testament. As if the Apostle should have said, The Doctrine of the Gospel is confirmed by the Prophets of old, therefore the Doctrine of the Gospel is most true and certain, therefore if ye mistrust me in commending the Gospelunto you, I remit you unto the Prophets of old, whose doctrines are a more surer word than this testimony of mine in respect of yourselves as yet, unto which word of Prophecy you do well to attend, as a light which shineth in a dark place; as to that light which now under the state of non-conversion and of blindness may do you some good, till the vail is taken off from your hearts; and Christ the morning star whom you so much despised arise upon you by his blessed Spirit to unfold this word of prophecy unto you, which will then not be a light in a dark place, but a true light unto you indeed, Christ by his Spirit having unvaild your hearts, that you may see that was the Messiah of the world, that was the true Christ, whom you have crucified; and of which this more sure word of Prophecy, or all the Prophets have spoken of. How this interpretation and explanation of the words may take with many, I cannot tell, but as yet, till God shall give in a further light upon my soul, I think it most agreeable to the mind of the Spirit. Aretius, Lucifer est plena Christi cognitio, postquam drsinet usus Propheticae doctrinae. The daystar is the full knowledge of Jesus Christ after the use of prophesying shall cease; which is, if it be meant of all believers, than the words must be thus understood: That when the time comes, 1. When Ordinances shall cease, and the means of grace shall cease, which will not be till the end of the world, till the dawning of the morning of the resurrection, the day star shall arise in our hearts, that is a full and perfect knowledge and enjoyment of Christ. 2. If in respect of the Jews to whom he wrote scattered up and down the Nations, than the words may be thus interpreted: That they do well to attend to the word of prophecy which speaks of Jesus Christ, as unto a light in a dark place, that is, as yet though but a darkish dispensation, till Christ the morning star shall arise and take the vail from off their hearts, that so they may see he was the very Messiah of the world whom they have crucified, of whom the Prophets of old have foretold. Qu. Whether are the teachings of the Spirit upon our hearts a sufficient call for us to undertake the Ecclesiastical Function? No. 1. Because then all elected, converted persons should be Pastors of Churches. 1 Cor. 12.17. And if all the body were an eye, where is the ear? for all true believers are taught of the Spirit. 2. Because the Spirits teachings are not revelations of high mysteries of things to come, a declaring of the whole mind and will of God in respect of every circumstance, a furnishing a man in a general way to know more than is meet for him as a private Christian to know, but a writing of all those things in his heart which pertain to life and godliness, and which are necessary for him to know as one that must be saved by Jesus Christ. 3. Because a man may have the Spirits teachings upon his heart, and yet be ignorant of many truths of God, because the Spirit teacheth successively, ut antea. 4. Because we never read in Scripture that any took upon them to be public Pastors of Churches, but only as it were auxiliaries and helps for the promoting of the work of the Lord in the planting of Churches in the Primitive times, as Aquila, Priscilla and Apollo's were, unless besides these teachings they had an immediate call from God, or a mediate by man, yea though they had extraordinary teachings upon their hearts. 5. Because besides the inward call of God's Spirit, which is a secret testimony that God hath set him apart, and endowed him with gifts and graces suitable for such a work, there is required an outward call, which is a designation, approbation, and setting him apart peculiarly for the work of the Pastoral charge and office, the Church and people of God electing him, in whose hearts he hath approved himself by his pious life and wholesome doctrine; and the Presbyters by the laying on of hands ratifying their election, and confirming him in his Office, Acts 6. v. 3. with v. 6. 1 Tim. 4.14. Yet the inward call, the call of God's Spirit, is the principal call, because thereby a man is sure that God hath appointed him for this work, who will bless him in it, if he be faithful unto the death. Happy is that servant who goeth forth in the Name of the Lord his God, that is, in the authority of his God, God will bless his labours, and give him the reward of his work. 12. Every Christian ought to walk up according to his light, and that measure of knowledge which he hath received. Woe be to those that walk not up to that light which God hath given them. Luke 12.47. He that knoweth his Master's will and doth it not shall be beaten with many stripes. 1. They that have only the light of nature to see by, aught to walk up according to their light. By the light of nature we know that there is a God; that this God is one only God; for there can be but one cause of all causes, who is the first cause of all causes, of whom all causes depend in esse & in operari; one that is infinite, in whom the perfections of all the creatures do meet, as all the lines do in the centre: that this God is to be worshipped; and that this God is to be worshipped after his own way and method, for who dares be so impudent to prescribe Rules and Canons of God's worship, but God himself: Hence we know naturally that as there is a God, so that this God hath his word, wherein he delivers his mind how we ought to serve him, and after what manner to do him homage. By the light of nature we know that we must live honestly, justly, that we must wrong no man, and give every one his own. The Gentiles who withheld the truth in unrighteousness, Rom. c. 1. and disobeyed the light of nature, were punished with a dreadful judgement from God, being given over to a reprobate mind to commit all iniquity with greediness. Those that walk not up to the light of nature shall be damned, as well as those that sin against the light of the Gospel, though their damnation shall be the lesser: Although the light of nature is not a sufficient light for salvation, yet I conceive that if the Heathens would but improve that natural light which they have unto the glory of God, God would come in with a greater light for the salvation of their souls. And who knows but that if the Heathens did improve that light which they have to God's glory; but that God might break in upon them with a greater light, with the light of the Spirit upon their hearts. The work of nature is the work of the God of nature, according to the Philosophical Axiom, Causa causae, etiam causa causati. Etsi hoc axioma cum grane salis accipiendum; and if God did see us walk up to that light, God would come in with a greater light upon our souls. 2. The light of conscience, every man ought to walk up according to the light of his own conscience. Pro. 20.27 Saith Solomon, The spirit of a man is the candle of the Lord, searching all the inward parts of the belly. God hath set up a candle in every man, whereby in some measure he may be able to distinguish between good and evil. This candle of the Lord is conscience, searching all the inward parts of the belly; which conscience is both a witness and a Judge; a witness to testify to our deeds accordingly as they be; and a Judge to absolve us or condemn us for them. Miserable is the condition of those persons who have their consciences continually accusing them: Saith God to Cain, Gen. 4.7. It lies at the door like a Mastiff-dog. If thou dost well shalt thou not be accepted? and if thou dost evil, sin lieth at the door. Sin by a Metonymy, for the guilt of sin: The guilt of sin lieth at the door, it lieth at the door as a Mastiff dog lies at the door, it will let thee have no rest day nor night, it will haunt thee up and down in thy bedchamber. Saith Solomon, Pro. 10.20 Curse not the King, no not in thy thought, for the bird of the air shall tell the matter, and that which hath wings shall carry the thing. This bird of the air is our own conscience, which will never let us alone till we have confessed them. Woe be to those that sin against their own consciences, their sins will find them out, and will torment them. Blessed be they that endeavour to keep a good conscience void of offence towards God and man, that will approve their hearts as in the sight of God, that would not violate the peace of their own consciences in the omission of any known duty, or in the commission of any known sin for the whole world. A good conscience is a continual feast. He that would keep faith and a good conscience, let him be sure to walk up according to the dictates of it. 3. To the light of natural improvements, moral educations, wholesome instructions, good examples, pious conversations. Woe be to those who walk not up to the light of natural improvements, that by their studies, good conference, offices, conditions, employments, have much improved that light which they had according to the contemplative part of it, and yet never truly have digested this light with the incomes of it, by turning it into practice, for the benefit of their souls! Perhaps they have got a great deal of knowledge by reading, by good education, holy counsels, observance of others, and yet are never the better in their lives and conversations. He that increaseth knowledge increaseth sorrow, unless true sanctified grace be joined with it. And all those good instructions, moral educations which thou hast had from thy parents, Master, friends, relations and others will but aggravate thy condemnation one day, unless thou art reform by them. The good examples, and the pious conversations of others, do but reprove the hardness of thy heart, and will rise up in judgement against thee at the last day, because thou hast been admonished by their righteous deal. Noah in preparing an Ark according to God's Word condemned the old world of unbelief, and of stiff necked impenitency. Every pin the good man drove into the Ark, was a secret reproof of their unbelief. Woe be to those that hate the light of counsel, of instruction, of reproof, and of exhortation. Consult that dreadful place, Prov. 28.1. He that being often reproved, hardeneth his neck, shall suddenly be destroyed, and that without remedy. 4. To the light of the word which includs both Law and the Gospel. 1. Sad is their condition who have only the Law to be their light, and yet sin against this Law; that know they should not commit adultery, and yet commit adultery, they should not steal, and yet will steal; they should not profane the Sabbath, and yet will profane the Sabbath, that know they should not serve idols, and yet will serve idols, etc. How many sore judgements, and grievous captivities do we read of in the old Testament which God brought upon his own people the Jews for the breach of his most holy and righteous Law. They had the Law and the Prophets, in which Prophets some Gospel, which intermingled, though little in respect of that light which we have, and yet their sinning against the light of the Law, and the word of Prophecy delivered unto them did so incense the Lord against them, that he often plagued them with sore judgements for their revoltings. 2. To the light of the Gospel. See the sad condition of those souls that walk not up to the light of the Gospel in the second of the Hebrews 2.3. v. For, if the word spoken by Angels was steadfast, and every transgression and disobedience received a just recompense of reward. How shall we escape if we neglect so great salvation, which at the first began to be preached by the Lord, and afterward was confirmed unto us by them that heard him. Sins against Gospel light are crying sins in the ears of God. By how much the greater engagements of mercy; by so much the more heinous will our sins be. If we walk not up to the light of the Gospel, we sin against a more clear and evident light, against such a light which discovers such love of God unto us in Jesus Christ, which can never be expressed. Against such a light which holds forth the clearest testimony of God's good will to sinners far beyond the apprehension of men and Angels. Such a light which the Angels themselves desire to behold, prying into and adoring the infinite wisdom of God revealed in it. Such a light which if we sin against it, will for ever render us altogether inexcusable at the last day, so that our mouths shall be muzzled as the man's was which came to the feast without a wedding garment, being not able to speak a word for ourselves. Such a light, which if we walk not up to, will sink us deep into the gulf of misery, and the blackness of darkness for ever. Such a light which if we walk not up to, but maliciously resist and oppose, we render ourselves guilty of that unpardonable sin against the holy Ghost, being condemned in our own consciences, and obnoxious to ourselves that we deserve eternal vengeance for the slighting of it. Such a light which if we do not obey, makes us guilty of the highest unbelief, the most notorious ingratitude, the greatestwant of charity, the most out-crying rebellion of the greatest hardness of heart, and of the most malicious hatred that possibly can be. He that rejecteth the light of the Gospel, forsaketh his own mercies he hath bid adien to God, to Christ, to the Spirit, to the Sacraments, to the promises, to the privileges of the Saints, yea to the Saints themselves being without hope for the present, Ephes. 4.17, 18. being turned from a Christian to be like those Gentiles who walk in the vanities of their minds, having their understandings darkened, lest the light of the glorious Gospel of Jesus Christ should shine into their hearts. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Ephes. 3.6. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Ephes. 1.3 Justitia Dei Dom. 1.17. Divina Virtus & potentia. 1 Cor. 1.24. Such a light in which is revealed the manifold wisdom of God, the riches of his grace, the righteousness of God, Divine power and virtue, the truth of God. Against such a light which is the ministry of the spirit, for the Gospel it is the ministry of the spirit, and not of the letter. Against such a light, which if we walk not up to we mightily incense the great Jehovah of heaven and of earth. Do you think that if a great Monarch should send to the poorest beggar that he hath under his dominions, having been a notorious rebel, traitor and apostate from him, A simile. a message of reconciliation unto him upon promise that if he would accept of pardon upon the supposition of amendment of life, he would not only be appeased with him and receive him into favour, but make him as it were his Son; if this miserable creature should refuse the pardon upon such noble terms, himself being exceedingly worthy of death; would not this render him guilty of the highest ingratitude, and of the greatest contumacy, if he should not close with this most courteous offer of grace and favour; such stubborn hearted sinners are they, who walk not up to the light of the Gospel. We are all of us by nature miserable, poor, and wretched creatures, enemies, rebels, traitors, and apostates from God. The King of Kings, the Lord of Lords, who is Lord over heaven and earth, sends unto us by his only son a message of reconciliation upon condition that we will receive this his only son, who hath died for us to redeem us from the captivity of sin and Satan and from the curse of the Law, and from eternal death, for our only Lord and Saviour, and serve him only and obey him, and keep his commandments, unto which gracious message, if we would but repent of our former rebellions, and endeavour to believe on Jesus Christ is annexed a most gracious promise of everlasting happiness, that we shall be his sons, and that he will give us a Kingdom, a Crown of Glory, an everlasting inheritance; and that we shall reign with Jesus Christ our elder brother and with himself for ever and ever. Now what rebels and stouthearted sinners are they? who shall not accept of this gracious offer upon so small conditions? The conditions are only to repent for our sins and to receive Jesus Christ for our Lord and Saviour to rule, and govern us by his Word and Spirit. Who would refuse such an honourable, good and gracious Master, such a noble service which hath a most copious reward annexed to it? In the service of Christ there is perfect freedom, but in the devil's service the greatest slavery, Then are you free indeed, John 8.6 if the Son shall make you free. Do not stand off I beseech you, close with this gracious offer, accept of these conditions, lest that thereby thou incensest God against thee to destroy thee; if thou refusest this offer of reconciliation, thou shalt never have the like again, for in rejecting it, thou sinnest against the remedy which God hath provided for the sin of thy soul by trampling under foot the precious blood of the Son of God, and art thereby become guilty of the death of Jesus Christ; and of thy own eternal condemnation. Walk up to this precious light, seek not to put out the candle of the Gospel, lest God in wrath for thy idleness, thy unprofitableness, thy stubbornness come and put it out himself. But walk in the light as long as thou hast the light, repent of thy sins, repent from thy sins, leave thy sins which have crucified Christ, which have been nails and spears in thy Saviour's side, and as thou art willing to be saved by him, so likewise be thou governed by him, that Christ might be thy Lord as well as thy Saviour, lest otherwise by the hardness and impenitency of thy heart, thou treasurest up to thyself wrath against the day of wrath, and the righteous revelation of the judgement of God by despising the riches of God's Grace revealed unto thee in the Gospel of his Son. R m 1.2, 3, 4. 5. To the light of the conviction of God's spirit, walk up to the light of the spirit convincing thee of thy sins. The spirits conviction is the spirits setting home upon the conscience, some sin by undeniable arguments, A description of the spirits conviction. and by an evident demonstration derived from the Word of God, whereby the sinner may know that he is guilty of the same sin, together with some dreadful place of Scripture, holding forth the terrible judgement of God upon those who commit such a sin, that thereby he might be drawn to a loathing, and to a forsaking of it. Sad is their condition who have such a conviction upon their hearts, and do not comply with the conviction for the forsaking of their sins. That think by merry company, by worldly employments, by long continuance to shake off this conviction from their spirits. Better had it been for thee, that thou hadst never been born then that thou shouldst live all thy days in the commission of any known sin, or in the omission of any known duty, that spirit convincing thee of thy sins. Motives against this sin. 1. Motives to close with the spirits conviction. That in not complying with the spirits conviction, thou opposest the spirit in its first work tending to thy conversion upon thy soul. The spirit convinceth before it converteth; the spirit of bondage must go before the spirit of adoption. The thundering and terrible voice of the Law before the sweet and the still voice of the Gospel; the Arrows of the Almighty within thee, make way for the sweet oil of consolation; in resisting the spirits interest in this work, thou opposest thy own salvation. 2. In opposing the light of the spirit by way of conviction upon thy soul, thou wilt bring by little and little, such a brawniness upon thy conscience, such a hardness upon thy heart, such a deadness upon thy affections, such a customariness in sinning, such an indisposition and averseness upon thy soul to any good thing, that the meats of grace which should have been for the food of thy soul, shall bothy poison; every Ordinance unprofitable, and thou shalt be a burden to the earth, an abominable creature in the eyes of God; the spirits quench-coal, an utter enemy to all goodness, and when thou comest to die Magormishabib a terror, and an astonishment unto thyself; another Francis Spira, another Judas, another Saul when thou comest to lie upon thy death deb. 3. This not walking up to the light of conviction will be an unconceivable torment and vexation of spirit unto thee in the flames of hell fire. When thou shalt have nothing to do else, but to consider how foolishly, how vainly thou didst spend this transitoty life in fulfilling the lusts of the flesh, and besides which will be the greatest misery, when thou shalt with anguish of spirit, and with gnashing of teeth consider, that if thou hadst closed with such a spiritual truth committed unto thee in a Sermon, perhaps the Minister beseeching thee, inviteing, exhorting thee, persuading thee with tears in his eyes to leave thy beloved sins, and to embrace Jesus Christ under the penalty of eternal condemnation, and hadst complied with the conviction of the spirit at such a time upon thy heart thou hadst escaped this place of torment. All convictions, impressions, motions of the spirit which the damned souls have had in this life, all powerful Sermons, all opportunity for the advantages of their souls, all good counsels, exhortations, beseechings of friends, relations, acquaintance, all that progress which they have made in Christianity, and that if they had gone but one step farther they might have obtained heaven, if they had not loved this present world too much, and with the young man in the Gospel, loved their possessions above Christ, they might have been while now they are in extreme misery; and when above all this the consideration of the spirits conviction, how that they were convinced in their own consciences by the act of the spirit setting home this sin, I say, when all these means of grace) advantage, and precious opportunityes with superadded convictions shall be upon their spirits, as than they shall be in a most eminent matter, their affections being quickened and raised to the full vigour of them, God is the immediate inflicter of the souls punishment in hell. their memories strengthened their understandings enlarged, and all their vain hopes and confidence ruined to their exceeding grief and misery, they will weigh heavier than the sand of the Sea, and did not infinite power support them under this unconceivable torment, as well as infinite justice inflict this torment by way of vengeance and in full fury upon them the damned spirits could not subsist one moment. What language do you think you should hear, supposing you were at hell's gate? Such as this, O wretch that I am! what a foolish, silly wretch was I that I did neglect so great salvation, that I did shift off the spirit striving and pleading with me from time to time convincing me of my sins, saying to morrow, and next day I will begin a new lesson; I will redeem the time, I will bethink me of eternity; but this morrow never yet came till now it is too late, time being swallowed up in this Ocean of eternity. O what a sluggard was I, to shift off the blessed spirit with such fond, foolish, and frivolous excuses, to make every thing an objection and a doubt to keep me off from an obedience to the truth. What a mad fellow was I to create fears, where no fear was, and to think that God's ways were full of bitterness; and that pleasure of sin exceeding sweet, to make offence, and stumble at a crucified Christ, to believe the devil, to hearken to flesh and blood, and to follow the course of this present evil world. O that I had those opportunities and those precious means for the good of my soul again afforded me, how would I live? How would I walk up to that light which God hath afforded me, always praying, reading, doing good, and working out my salvation with fear and trembling? But alas, there is no more time, there are no more seasons of grace afforded me; God is departed from me in respect of any future merry for ever, hell hath shut her mouth upon me; and therefore, O that I had to my everlasting comfort complied and harkened to the voice of the spirit contending with me; That I had walked up to the light of the spirit, than it had been otherwise with me to my perpetual joy, than it is now to my eternal misery? Thus the wretched sinner laments itself when it is too late, and wishes it had never been unless he had been better, because he improved not those talents, and walked not up to that light which God had given him. Reasons why every soul ought to walk up according to its Light. 1. Because God judgeth every one according to his light, Rom. 2.12. For as many as have sinned without Law, shall also perish without Law, and as many as have sinned in the Law, shall be judged by the Law, that is, those that are without the moral Law written upon tables of stone, but have only the Law of nature written upon their hearts (though the moral Law is nothing but what is founded upon nature as appears in the 15. verse. For the Gentiles which have not the Law, i. e. the moral Law do by nature the things contained in the Law) if they sin against the Law written in their consciences, shall only be judged according to that Law; and those that have the moral Law shall be judged according to the moral Law; but those who have the light of the Gospel, shall be judged according to the light of the Gospel, 16. v. In the day when God shall judge the secrets of men's hearts according to my Gospel; And those that have sinned against the light of conviction, and the strive of the spirit shall be judged according to that light, and according as our light is, so will be our condemnation, Mat. 11.22. It will be more tolerable for Sodom and Gomorrah in the day of judgement then for us who live under the light of the Gospel, and the spirits convictions, because our light is the greater. And for those who live under Gospel light, it will be more tolerable for those at the day of judgement who have lived under a powerful Ministry all their days, and have had more influences of the spirit upon their hearts, and have had the spiritual Manna continually falling round about their houses, as the inhabitants of the famous City of London have who are blessed above all other Nations with spiritual blessings, than those who are less watered with showers of Grace from heaven, if they shall let slip their opportunities, and sleep out the day of visitation which is afforded them. The Lord takes notice of every Sermon we hear, and of every prayer we have prayed, of every time we have received the Sacrament, of every impression we have had upon our spirits, of all those counsels, exhortations, admonitions, reproofs, corrections, instructions we have had; of all that natural knowledge we had, with the improvements of it, of all the prayers and beseechings others have made, and put to God for us; of all those secret checks of conscience, of all those various acts of providence in the course of our lives; marvellous deliverances from dangers, from sicknesses, from imprisonments; in providing for us when all other helps and means have failed; of all those resolutions we have made of better obedience, upon some notable conviction upon our spirits; of all our services performed unto him in private and in public; and of all that conference and communion we have had with the Saints; of all that progress we have towards heaven, and that if we had gone but a step or two further we might have been happy; and according to the several gradations of our, spiritual advantages upon the neglect of them, so shall our condemnation be. God will judge us for every Sermon, wherein we have not met him in a Sermon, for every prayer wherein we have not met him in a prayer, for every receiving of the Sacrament wherein we have not met Christ in that Sacrament. We are then said to meet God in a duty, when upon the right improvement of it, God comes nigher to us in ways of further discoveries upon our hearts, or our hearts are drawn nigher to God and to Jesus Christ in way of heavenly mindedness, and sonlike obedience. 2. We ought to walk up to that light which we have, because God hath to this end given this light unto us, that our evil deeds being made manifest, we may loathe ourselves for them, and avoid them for the time to come. Wicked men they hate the light, Joh. 3.20. because their deeds are evil; they know that it is the nature of light to make manifest; and thereupon if they should come to the light, their consciences would be awakened, and the peace of their besotted spirits lulled asleep in gross ignorance, carnal security, the pleasures of sin, and by the devil would be disturbed. But the godly on the other side, they rejoice in the light, in the light of the Word, in the light of the Spirit; and bless God for the time that ever they were acquainted with the evil nature of their sins, and with the experience of God's infinite goodness unto them in Jesus Christ. A righteous man fears not the terrors of the Law; 1 Tim. 1.9 for the Law was not made for him, but for the rebellious, disobedient, murderers of fathers, and murderers of mothers: And he rejoiceth in the glad tidings of the Spirit: He desires to be taught by the Spirit, and daily to be nurtured up in the School of Christ, till he shall come to the perfection of the Saints in glory. He that doth truth cometh to the light, Joh. 3.21. that his deeds may be made manifest that they are wrought in God. 3. Because if a man's spirit gives him in, that such a thing is a duty, though it be nor, or such a thing is a sin, though in itself it be not a sin, yet if he walk not up according to that verdict his conscience gives in of it, unless the Word of God speaks directly against it, and it be directly opposite to the analogy and proportion of faith, he sins in not so doing. Saith the Apostle, Whatsoever is not of faith is sin; Rom. 14.23. that is, whatsoever we do doubtingly and ambiguously, being in distrust whether the thing ought to be done or no, if we do it, we sin in so doing. We should do nothing but what we verily believe aught to be done. In these two cases we may follow the light of our own consciences. 1. In things indifferent, which are neither simply commanded, nor simply for bidden. 2. In things which do not positively contradict the doctrine of faith and piety, and the express Word of God; or a direct and an immediate consequence, plain to the capacity of all understanding men void of any prejudice against the truth, drawn from solid and evident places of Scripture pat to the purpose we have in hand. But if any man shall pretend a Tenet, or a Custom, or a Doctrine to be received, believed, performed and practised, because his own conscience gives him in it is so, or aught to be believed and practised, though he hath an express command to the contrary in God's Word, I say that this man's heart is full of Atheism and unbelief, and grossly deluded by the devil, and though his erroneous conscience gives him in, it must be so, yet he sins if he doth it, because it is directly contrary to the Word of God. Now if a man sins, if he walks not up to the light of his conscience in some cases, though it may be erroneous; then much more he walks not up to the light of the Word and of the Spirit, these are infallible lights without the least error and deceit. Lord God we beseech thee, that seeing our hearts are so apt to deceive us, and to be deceived; the world to flatter us, and the devil to beguile us; and because we live in unstable times, full of delusions, wherein the mystery of iniquity gins to work, and Satan's agents are now transformed into Angels of light, that our hearts might not be bewitched with these mere phantasms, and ghosts of piety, with these shadows in stead of substance, but give us that spiritual eyesalve, whereby we may discern the cunning sleights of men who lie in wait to deceive; and that Christian prudence to foresee the evils that are coming upon the earth. Psal. 43.3. Send forth thy light and thy truth, we beseech thee, thy light is a true light, and thy truth is light, that by thy light we may see light, and by the teachings of thy Spirit upon our hearts, we may be so established in the ways of God, that neither the Errors, Heresies, and Blasphemies that are abroad in the world may taint us, nor that desolation which is coming upon us for our sins, unless they be washed away with the tears of repentance, and with amendment of life, may drive us from our hope and confidence of God, but that patiently enduring the chastening of the Lord, because we have sinned against him, by that witnessing act of thy Spirit, evidently teaching us that we are thy children; in the midst of all these heart-quaking times we may rejoice in the expectation of future happiness. FINIS.